} i .:zsx.-;aiat-it.'fi'3~rr.r::f^- i t I I h 11 I I 1 I i t \ I *W! Hf'liSHtW^'fcftEfc^ FROM THE LIBRARY OF REV. LOUIS FITZGERALD BENSON. D. D. BEQUEATHED BY HIM TO THE LIBRARY OF PRINCETON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY fOOCa I THE CHURCH QUEEN ELIZABETH Beati pacifici. •^ " In the whole carriage of this work I have assumed unto myself the freedom of a just historian ; concealing nothing out of fear, nor speaking anything for favour ; delivering nothing for a truth without good authority ; but so delivering that truth as to witness for me that I am neither biassed by love or hatred, nor overswayed by partiality and corrupt affections." — Peter Heylyn, D.D. •f 3fi&e et constantia. ^ FEB 16 1932 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH AN HISTORICAL SKETCH. By FREDERICK GEORGE LEE, D.D. Vicar of All Saints, Lamueth. 3t Itftw anl» 0ll|e(xv«v (DJiition. WITH AX IXTRODUCTION ON THE PRESENT POSITION OF THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH. LONDON : PHILADELPHIA : THOMAS BAKER. JOHN J. McVEY. 1897. TO ALL WHO ARE PREPARED TO LOOK OUR DIFFICULTIES AS ENGLISH CHURCHMEN FAIRLY IN THE FACE AND WHO HAVING REALISED THEM, ARE ENDEAVOURING IN A CONSERVATIVE SPIRIT AND BY A REASONABLE METHOD TO OVERCOME THEM THE GENEROUS, THE SELF-SACRIFICING, THE ZEALOUS FRIENDS, KNOWN AND UNKNOWN ABROAD AND AT HOME LABOURING IN THE FAITH AND FEAR OF GOD, AND ON NO SANDY FOUNDATION FOR • , CORPORATE REUNION THIS VOLUME IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED IN THE HOPE, WITH A BLESSING FROM ON HIGH, OF RESTORED PEACE AND VISIBLE UNITY UNDER THE PATERNAL RULE OF THE CHIEF BISHOP OF CHRISTENDOM " The Reformation, no doubt, cost much. It broke up the visible unity so dear to Christians who believe our Lord's universal prayer in St. John and the Epistle to the Ephesians to be part of the Word of God. It bred a race of violent experimentalists, who were in their time enemies of faith, of charity, and of order." — Canon Liddon's Sermon at St. Mary's, Oxford, reported in the Guardian of 25th June 1S79. " I know of no law, human or divine, which forbids me, or any other free-born Englishman, whilst submitting to every existing ordinance of man for the Lord's sake, to use all constitutional means for the repeal and abrogation of all such laws as I believe to be mischievous and contrary to the revealed and declared will of God. What I, for one, mean, when I say that I will do my utmost to undo the work of the Reformation, is this : — I believe that the chief and most important work which was done at the Reformation was to render the things of God unto Coesar. I shall always strive, to the best of my humble ability, to give back to God the things of God. And the cuckoo-cry of ' the principles of the Reformation are in danger ' certainly will not scare me from my purpose. If the Reformation gentlemen considered themselves justified, as I suppose they did, in upsetting the Settlement of Magna Charta, a settlement brought about and cemented by the martyrdom of our most glorious saint and patron, St. Thomas, why should I have a moment's hesitation in doing my best to strive to alter the Reformation Settlement and go back to that of Magna Charta and St. Thomas ? I wait for an answer." — " The Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven : " a Sermon by the Rev. Dr. T. W. Mossman, O.C.R., pp. 14, 15. (London, 1879.) Sntrobuction, THE PRESENT POSITION OF THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH. When, in 1833, the Tractarian movement first arose at Oxford, it is remarkable that its leaders, in their important work of restoration and reparation, commenced with explaining and maintaining the doctrine of the Sacraments, and not that of the true nature and character of the Universal Church. This was like carving the pinnacle before securing the foundation. They assumed, but never once attempted to prove, that the established communion in England was identical, in all essential particulars, with the Old Church of the country, and in communion with the Church throughout the world. They started with the assump- tion that none of the changes at the " Reformation " had altered its organic life, though the then disorganised religious state of England stared them in the face. Of course this easier method saved them a world of investigation and trouble. Having a solid foundation, as they so obviously believed themselves to possess, they could proceed to build up a superstructure. This, as we know, they did both with system and spirit. In so doing they took for granted that the ordinary historical theories concernmg the changes under Henry VIII., Edward VI., and Elizabeth were, in the main, true and to be depended on. But these theories have turned out to be only theories ; and, though bolstered up for some years under Burnet's tuition, in the face of historical documents which have been brought to light of late, they now no longer hold their ground. They are exploded ; for they were founded only on fraud, fiction, and romance. It is hard to entertain the conviction that, during Queen Elizabeth's reign, the persecutors of the Catholics, men like Grindal, Sandys, Cecil, and Walsingham belonged to the same religious communion as Vlii INTRODUCTION. did those poor souls who, on rehgious grounds, endured such virulent persecution at their hands — the Rack, the Scavenger's Daughter, and the Little Ease. The idea of " the Catholic Church," as set forth in the Three Creeds, was wholly different, therefore, in the minds of the persecutors and the persecuted. With the former " the Church was a local or national institu- tion recently made by themselves and Parliament, of which the Queen was the source of all jurisdiction and authority, the lawful bestower of the chief dignities, the final arbiter of all theological and ecclesiastical disputes; in fact, the supreme head or governess. With the latter, as with St. Gregory the Great, it was " evident to all who knew the gospel, that by the Voice of the Lord the care of the whole Church was committed to holy Peter, the prince of all the apostles. . . . For to him it is said, 'Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church, and I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven.' Behold, he receives the keys of the heavenly kingdom ; the power of binding and of loosing is given to him. To him the care atid governntefii of the ivhole Church is committed.'''' ^ The Tractarian movement, nevertheless, has done much for England ; for it has given a new phase of character to, and created a fresh interest in, the Established Church. In external questions — decency, order, and ornaments — it has brought about a silent revolution. The slovenly and idle of a previous genera- tion, who moved in a well-defined groove, have given place to quite another race, much more active no doubt, owning several meritorious virtues, but distinguished at the same time by greater narrowness, less solid learning and zeal, and a remarkable tend- ency on the part of some of its members to rest satisfied with ephemeral and shallow literature. Art, poetry, and architecture, however, discreetly made use of, have at the same time each lent a helping hand in securing the far better reformation than that which was completed under Queen P^lizabeth. Even in deeper and more important questions much has been likewise done by the Tractarians. So that if the main bulk of the nation, the people generally, have only been slightly touched by that movement ; if the Establii^hment itself has become more com- l)rehensive, a considerable and respectable minority — perhaps a third of the clergy, their dependents, and their immediate friends ' " Cunctis cvangelium scientibus liquet, quod voce Dominica santto et omnium Apostolorum principi Petro Apostolo totius Ecclesi.-v cura commissa est. . . . Ecce claves Rej^ni Gvlestis accipit, potestas ci liy;an(li ac solvondi tribuitur, cura ei tolius Ecclosiii; et principatus committitur. " — S. Gregor. Mag. Epist. ad Maiirit. August., lib. iv. Epist. 32. INTRODUCTION. IX and allies ; certain laymen with ecclesiastical tastes, and many single women of the upper and middle classes— have been largely influenced.^ Thus, as every one may see, a minority has, both in principle and taste, become more Catholic ; while the Church of England itself, in its corporate capacity, has distinctly grown more latitudinarian and human. Out of this movement another has recently developed, harm- less enough and even beneficial so long as the energies of its more active members were confined to restoring churches intro- ducing Gregorian music and surpliced choirs, putting up stained glass windows, wearing albs and chasubles, and repairing the universal ruin and desolation which the Reformation, the Great Rebellion, and the Revolution of William of Orange — separate acts in one doleful drama — have in turn so efficiently wrought. But anything but harmless, when it inconsistently began to advocate laxity of doctrine, and tolerate " schools of thought " in which Catholicism finds no place ; to enlarge the breach between England and Rome ; to discountenance corporate reunion ; to disparage the English Roman Catholics,'-^ who through so long a night of moral darkness have kept the lamp of divine truth burning. These, though persecuted with demoniacal fury, have come forth again to proclaim, without change or variation, the very same faith which Bede and St. Wilfred, St. Thomas the Martyr, Warham, More, Watson, and Cardinal Pole held and taught. They have an admirable organ- isation ; they cannot be ignored, and on every reasonable Anglican theory, being brethren in Christ, surely should not be abused. It is, of course, disappointing and melancholy to note that some of the more recent exhibitions of " Ritualism," as it is called, display all the narrowness, virulence, and pettiness of the ^ In this movement it is remarkable, as showing its exceptional character- istics, that individual effort and not corporate action secures success. The Church of England itself, as a corporation, does little or nothing. Even if the ordinary work of Christianity has to be done, a special organisation, like the S. P. G. , the Teetotal Society, or the Home Mission Order, has to be started to do it. Moreover, so much depends on the lives of individuals. A certain work may flourish so long as some gifted parson carries it on ; but, if change or death should happen, the work too often altogether collapses. - Mr. Mackonochie, the noted Ritualist, is reported to have declared in a sermon that " separation from the Church of England involved separation from Christ." If to the modern English Establishment had been exclusively entrusted the office of custodian of the faith, it is no exaggeration to say that the faith in England must long ago have perished ; for even now it is impos- sible for any one to declare for certainty what the Establishment teaches concerning the elementary doctrine of baptism, much less, in regard to others, what it preserves, affirms, or regards with indifference. X INTRODUCTION. most perverse sects.^ From fair and open argument with Roman Catholics their self-elected leaders have long ago retired ; and by a now prolonged silence (except the hebdomadal jabber - of their cheap serials) appear to indicate that, confuted if not discomfited, they have given up the contest as lost. Their iniluence, consequently, is very much less than they assume it to be. It may be, and possibly is, very considerable in certain private convents, where the Superior, without legitimate authority or reasonable check of visitor or diocesan, can exercise a moral tyranny which only old women could practise, and only young ones put up with. The reiterated boast, again, that the horny-handed working- men of London and our great cities care for the ritualistic movement, is at once confident and loud ; but this appears to be only based on the daring assertions of unscrupulous wire-pullers; who, holding the strings and rings, lie concealed in the back- ground, while their hired puppets caper and threaten, brag and posturise, reading out what has been written for them to maintain ^ As two recent examples of this, the cases of Mr. E. S. Grindle, the celebrated " Presbyter Anglicanus," and Mr. Orby Shipley, who disconnected themselves from the Establishment, will be familiar to all. The ungenerous, spiteful, and insolent manner in which some of their old allies at once wrote of them was pitiful and humiliating to read. '^ As a specimen of the profane scoffing and infidel-like sneers (worthy of Voltaire himself) in which some of the Ritualists indulge, the following ex- tract from one of their serials, dated April 19th, 1879, edited by a parson, is given. It displays a vicious spirit so thoroughly repulsive and anti-Christian, that no wonder can arise that God seems to have forsaken the sect it repre- sents, now given up to frivolity, intestine squabbles, and despair : — "The Romans, I see, have imported miracles into England. France has no longer a monopoly of our Lady of Lourdes. She has condescended to cure the paralytic even in the very midst of 'unorthodox London.' The event came off a fortnight ago at a home for poor Roman Catholic boys in the Harrow Road, and which is supported by sensational advertisements headed 'save the boy.' Lord Archibald Douglas is about to build a chapel for his lads, dedicated, of course, to our Lady of Lourdes, and, of course again, some of the water from the holy fountain was brought to England to be sprinkled round the foundation-stones. Two of the lads, who have been unable for many months to walk, through paralysis, were carried to see the ceremony, and sprinkled with the precious water. The story goes that on the morrow the nurse went to carry the boys as usual, but, viiriihile dictii, they with one consent began to walk. The doctor will, of course, be ready to disclaim all merit in the earthly drugs which he was giving to them, and the people who set down the awe to excitement and overwrought expectation will lie regartled as little better than infidels. And as a miracle is born, if I may so say, at one's very door, what the miracle will be like when it is full-grown, after all the witnesses have been scattered and investigation is rendered difticult, those may guess who have traced the effect of their own imagination in dealing with the wonderful." See Appendix, No. III., p. 364. INTRODUCTION. xi or assert on some public stage. Disorder and topsy-turvyism must certainly have risen to a perfect climax, and all authority have been repudiated, when compositors, basket-makers, and the owners of cheap newspapers can unblushingly stand forward, without any commission whatsoever from their fellow-workmen, to browbeat, bully, and pretend to instruct the various bishops of the Established Church in their official duties. But amongst the great mass of Englishmen the general policy of these Ritualists (besides being taken up so much with (juestions of externals) is altogether too wayward and weak ever to command any but an occasional, and then very often only a contemptuous, consideration. The old High Church party, or what now remains of it, has still, as is well known, a few great and influential leaders with a small following in the nation, and smaller influence. Unable to resist the Divorce Bill,i the infidel School Board system, and Lord Penzance, its members still make weighty speeches and put forth disregarded protests. For promoting union and defending the principles of the Church of England (vvhatever they may be), they form grand organisations like the English Church Union, which, it is to be feared, only make old separations more patent and fresh divisions more painful. Rome, and all that belongs thereto, they appear fanatically to hate — the language of some being at once ridiculous and profane ; while they somewhat ostentatiously profess to be in love with what they call " the tme principles of the Reformation." Secret societies for special prayer, and for enabling ministerial neophytes to lead a less worldly life than many Church of England parsons live, like the Society of the Holy Cross, are blown down and fall to pieces like a child's card-house, when the breath of public opinion, bearing their condemnation, meets them all of a sudden. Sacred members, forgetting their official dignity, scream at being dis- covered ; and, in fear and trembling which seems perfectly sincere, are soon scattered as sheep without either fold or shepherd. Archdeacon Palmer of Oxford, in his recent charge (a.d. 1879), has described the position of the Established Church, and stated the case concerning the supreme jurisdiction of the Crown, with 1 " The Divorce Act, so far as it went, rcaj- an act of national apostasy, and in a marvellously brief space it has succeeded in breaking down the Christian instincts of the community. It gives us a startling view of the degradation of the public morals which has already taken place, to learn from Sir James Hannen that the motive of the suitors who go before him is, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, simply to obtain a licence to marry again."— C7^wr/i Times, September 19th, 1879. Xll INTRODUCTION. great accuracy and singular calmness. Temperate, unambiguous, and plain, he is at the same time frankly and perfectly Erastian ; though apparently ready to sacrifice something, if it can be shown to him that the principle of Erastianism is fatal, as it certainly is, to any efficient Christian work. Moreover, he quite admits the right and reasonableness of endeavouring to remedy the evil in a constitutional method. Here are his words : — "In my judgment, the cardinal fact is that the final determination of all ecclesiastical causes is vested in the Crown, and is confided to a Court which the Crown has established with the consent of Parliament, and of Parliament alone, and that all other courts ecclesiastical are bound to echo its decisions. This, as I have reminded you, has been the law and use of England for nearly three centures and a half, if we neglect the short reign of Philip and Mary. It has been, in principle, more than once formally recognised, never formally repudiated, by the synods of the Church of England.^ " It is our right, as Englishmen, to use all lawful and constitutional means, in order to procure the repeal of the statutes on which this special jurisdiction of the Crown rests, if we think such repeal desirable — as it is our right to use like means in order to procure the repeal of any other statutes now in force. But it is also, I venture to think, our duty, both as Englishmen and as Church- men, to obey these statutes while they are unrepealed, and to submit to the decisions of the court which derives its authority from them. I need not attempt to prove our duty as Englishmen to obey any law of the land ; but I may be asked what furtiier obligation to obedience in this particular lies on us as Churchmen. My answer is twofold. First, we are bound to obey, on the principle of deference to Church authority. Our Church, as I have said already, has more than once synodically affirmed the supreme jurisdiction of the Crown in causes ecclesiastical; she has never synodically rejected it. Secondly, we are bound to obey, on the principle of regard to the highest interests of the Church. I do not speak of lands, or money, or any civil privileges whatever. I value these things highly. I value highly what men call the establishment of religion in this country. But I value it only as means to an end ; I value it only as a gigantic Home Mission Eund, which enables the Church to carry the message of salvation to the poorest districts of our great towns, and the most secluded nooks in England. Let it all go to-morrow, if it can be shown to be the price of its retention that the Church must deny her Lord, or cease to do His work effectively." As showing the actual working of this system before our eyes, the following advice by Bishop Moberly, in his recent charge to the clergy of his diocese (a.d. 1879) regarding the use of the ^ This statement of fact and law is mainly identical with that of the Arch- deacon's brother, Lord Selborne, who in his controversies both with " A .Sussex Priest," Mr. E. S. Grindle, as to principle, and with Mr. James Parker of Oxford as Xofact, retired in both cases from any attempt to main- tain the two untenable positions which his lordship had assumed, and on which, it is to be feared, a Privy Council judgment was in part founded. See Canon or Statute: A Correspondence on the P. W. R. Act betiveen Lord Selborne and a Sussex Priest. London, 1875. Did Qiieen Elizabeth take Other Order in the Advertisements ^^1566? A Letter to Lord Selborne, with a Postscript. By James Parker, M. A. London, 1879. INTRODUCTION. xiii mixed chalice and the duty of obedience to Lord Penzance, appears astounding : — His lordship "was ready to admit, in the abstract, that a secular authority ought not to interpose in matters of sacred doctrine ; but still he thought the wisest course would be to submit to decisions when they had once been pronounced (even when they pressed unduly upon the clergy), instead of per- mitting them to be pointed at as signs of disunion. The bishop referred to the 'mixed chalice' question, and quoted various authorities to show that the mixed chalice, probably made use of by our Lord Himself at the institution of the Eucharist, was certainly in use in the primitive Church, and that there was nothing to show that it ever gave rise to superstition in the Roman Church before the Reformation. He considered it had never been prohibited by Act of Parliament or canon, but he counselled the clergy, as an adverse judgment had been given, to refrain from the practice in question." On which it is sufficient to remark that if, in the first stages of the Church, the bishops had shown themselves to have been as amiable, peace-loving, and impressible as Dr Moberly, there would certainly have been no Christianity of any sort or kind left to be squabbled over in the present faithless age. It must surely be rather a stretch of faith — not to write "an act of credulity" — to believe that men like this are divinely-appointed custodians of the Christian deposit of faith. The key to the spiritual position, as both archdeacon and bishop conclusively show, and as all can now see, was long ago given up, when England was duped into practically repudiating her relations with the universal Christian kingdom, its laws, and its ruler. Cranmer first betrayed the local flock which he was to govern ; and so made a similar work easier for those who came after him — INIatthew Parker and his immediate allies. The New Church, as finally arranged, formed, and moulded under Queen Elizabeth, was a purely local and national body, neither more nor less ; and has so remained, under a variety of theological and ecclesiastical changes,^ unto the present day. For no national Parliament can possibly create a divine institu- tion, and the missionary work of a human society ever fails. Parliament may properly give a charter to a gas company, or ^ Mr. F. H. Dickenson, a frequent correspondent of the Guardian, in a letter which appeared in the number for September loth, 1S79, writes most truly and accurately thus: — "Any one who has watched the Church of England during the past forty years must see that our faith and doctrine have largely altered ; and there is no reason to think that alteration has ceased," — one fresh proof, were it needed, of the changeable and human character of the institution in question. Did the Guardians correspondent regard it as divine, he would no doubt instinctively shrink from making proposals to patch, mend, or further "reform " it. As it stands, he merely exercises, with regard to it, the inherent and indisputable right of every free-born Englishman. xiv INTRODUCTION. authorise a railway board to use a corporate seal ; but as for making a " Church " which is not inherently and essentially national and local — this is altogether beyond its great and acknowledged powers. The sooner, therefore, that members of the established com- munion admit this, and begin to realise the most primary and elementary detail of (iod's revelation — and so, by precise thought, recognise respectively the true nature of the Church of Pentecost and the actual character of the Church of England ; regarding each of which many have the most confused and inexact ideas) — the better will it be for all of us. By a series of tortuous arguments and historical misrepresentations, confusion has been made worse confounded. For loose expressions, words like " the Church " used in half a dozen different senses, and a mis-bestowal of the marks of the one Catholic body — the ark of salvation, — upon mere local communions, cannot be sufficiently reprehended.^ Such dialectical ambiguities perplex, confuse, and mislead. The one Church of God is alone divine, all local and national Churches being essentially human. As a consequence of such unfortunate confusion of thought and expression, certain persons have acted in late years as though the actual laws of the national Church of England ought to be practically revised or modified from time to time by some other external and independent law — some fanciful ideal, some statute of Utopia ; — and in so acting have brought much trouble upon themselves and little advantage to their neighbours. How can the Catholic Church — which concerns all nations and ])eoples, but belongs exclusively to none — which is infallible, for it was created by the Holy Spirit, — how can this divine corporation either revise or reverse the sentences of any parlia- mentary communion ? What actual machinery can be brought into operation to effect such a process? Which of the ancient canons, moreover, ever recognised a woman as capable of being supreme head of a parish — -putting aside a diocese or a group ^ I take the following from the current newspapers and serials of September l87() : — " Our mother, the Church of England." — " Our Church is far more favoured of God than any other Church." — "Not true members of Our Church at all; their hearts are elsewhere, with another Church," etc. — "Our beloved Church is founded on the Bible, whereas," etc. — "Where other Churches have secured a vantage-ground Our Church should certainly do the same." — "They remain in Our Church in order to revile her," etc. etc. etc. ad nauseam : all most conclusively proving that in the minds of the loose-thinking scribblers who use such phrases "Our Church" is (as without a doubt it most certainly is) something quite difierent from the Church of ihe Creeds — the one divine and world-wide corporation set up at Pentecost. INTRODUCTION. XV of dioceses? The Catholic Church throughout the whole world is, as we all know, guided by canon law, administered by- living and lawful ecclesiastical judges, independent of kings, queens, and all secular rulers, and not amenable to civil courts ; while the Church of England is now notoriously governed by Lord Penzance. Thomas Cromwell first ruled it under Henry VIII., Somerset under Edward VI., Cecil under Elizabeth. Ever since its foundation it has been similarly governed, either by commissioners api)ointed by the monarch, or some local court : and as long as it retains its present position, isolated and local, it will continue to be so governed. People complain of the English Court of Appeal in spiritual causes,! which consists of certain Privy Councillors; but if they are content to remain visibly separated from the rest of Chris- tendom, and not amenable to the great and universal Court of Appeal of the one Catholic Church, — and to this they are certainly not amenable, for some positively glory in their isola- tion, — they must put up with the inconvenience and make the best of it. The law which this local and peculiar court professes to administer is not the law of God; of that it knows nothing, and cares nothing. Its business is to regulate the public preaching and teaching of the ministers of "the Establishment, not according to God's revelation or the canon law of the Church Universal, — with these it has nothing whatsoever to do,— but, as the Reformers first determined, in strict and literal accordance with the statutes of the realm, with the enactments of the British Parliament. As regards religion, every doctrine of God's revelation is sub- jected to the decisions of purely State tribunals. Our Blessed Lord is now only permitted to occupy that place which a re- presentation of Him obtained under Alexander Severus, in the ^ "What, I ask," wrote Mr. ex-Chancellor Wagner, "would St. Ambrose have said to the recent trial of ' Jenkins versus Cooke ' ? This unseemly trial proves, beyond all possibility of cavil, that the civil power in England claims to decide, in the last resort, not merely ' the temporal accidents of spiritual things,' but even who shall, or who shall not,' be admitted to the Holy Communion, and, what is infinitely more serious still, that the Primate of all England is quite willing personally to acquiesce in this most fatal claim, else he would have refused, with horror, to sit in the court at all. It is sadly significant and noteworthy that not one single bishop of the province of Canterbury has, as yet, publicly protested against a claim which, if granted, would wholly efface the spiritual authority of a ' bishop in the Church of God,' and make him the mere creature or tool of the civil power, powerless to exert the authority entrusted to him by our Lord Jesus Christ."— C/^r/f^ or Casar? part ii. p. 40. London, 1877. XVI INTRODUCTION. temple of the gods. All religions, it is maintained, are at last alike. l"he Church is now a "denomination." The crimes of blasphemy, infidelity, sacrilege, and atheism, moreover, are at length no crimes at all. Civil and religious liberty has efficiently changed all that. Images of atheists are set u[) in the public thoroughfares, and pointed at with pride as representations of great public benefactors. Blasphemers are honoured, and people are thus indirectly enjoined to go and do likewise. Parental rights, moreover, having their roots in natural religion, are, as regards education in England, on the high road to being altogether wiped out and lost. Of this the mob approves. The source of all authority, whether that of kings or priests, is God Almighty ; but when legitimate Authority is laughed to scorn and trampled under foot by those who in its place have set up a rival human authority, — always wayward, weak, uncertain, vacillating, and liable to all kinds of error, — those who refuse to believe, fear, and serve their Maker, find that they too soon become slaves, tyrannised over cruelly, and whose backs are in the long run well scourged by scorpions of their own nurturing. People sometimes remark that our Catholic ancestors must have been very indifferent or greatly wanting in zeal to have allowed such changes as those effected by a few " Reformers ''' to have been made without resistance. But in answer to this it should be remembered that they did resist to the best of their ability. In Yorkshire, Durham, Norfolk, Devonshire, Oxford- shire, and Lincolnshire, at various times, a most noble resistance -ii'as made by force, as well by poor as by rich. But it failed ; and the heavy hand of vengeance, with a sanguinary and cruel grip,^ came down upon all engaged in that resistance. But to judge this question more equitably. Let us consider how tamely and quietly the changes effected by the Divorce Court, infidel education, and Lord Penzance's parliamentary authority — certain steps in our downward descent as a nation — are being actually submitted to, before our very eyes, ere we ' The Catholic Relief Act of 1778, and for Ireland in 1782, which relaxed some of the more ferocious parts of the penal laws and their most cruel grip, was only passed at a tim6 when P'rance and America were in confederation against England, and union at home was sorely needed. Down to that period the penal statutes of Elizabeth, James I., and William of Orange had disgraced our statute-book. In addition to persecution, riols, and violence for Roman Catholics were known under Lord George Gordon ; again in 1807, in 1829, and in 1846; and again when the new Roman Catholic Hierarchy was set up. It is highly improbable that this volcano is (juile extinct ; for, as most of the legal relaxations of late years have been made at times of national trial and political strain, when fears abounded, the real sentiments of the populace may be unknown or inadequately forecast. INTRODUCTION. xvii judge our ancestors too severely. The disastrous divisions of the Reformation have finally resulted in the anti-Christian system of education now completely in the ascendant. At the universities, in our ancient grammar schools, as well as in the recent national plan for instructing the lower classes — supported by public rates ^ — the Christian religion is quietly and con- temptuously set aside, — with evil results which will soon enough be painfully discovered. Such a system of public schools may probably soon result in a corresponding system of public churches, where every sect may perform its orgies ; and where, moreover, every individual may worship whatsoever god or gods may have been set up, or may be tolerated, by the State ; or where the more advanced "philosophers" may worship each other or themselves. Now, it is only a very small minority of the English people who can heartily approve of either of these three dangerous measures, yet they have been each duly carried, and are now the law of the land ; while few, possibly, would dream of agitating for their abolition. The evil is seen, but not the remedy. Patriotism, zeal, and self-sacrifice are all given up in favour of self-seeking, wicked principles, and a false peace — ■ that peace which only too surely heralds national corruption and certain decay. In our cities and large towns — which are quietly reverting to paganism ; for, of late years, since the infamous " Gorham Judgment," not more than fifteen per cent, of the people are ' baptized at all ^ — what do we behold ? The churches of the 1 Dr. James Fraser, who once occupied the position of a Christian bishop at Manchester, is reported to have quite recently remarked that he looked upon the gradual extinction of all schools save Board schools with calm satisfaction and without any fear. The vicar-general of the diocese of Salford, however, recently pointed out that " the Church of England was gradually surrendering the great principles of religious education and handing her schools over to the School Boards. After a while the Church of Enijland schools would cease altogether to be public elementary schools. When that time came there would remain only the Board schools and the Catholic schools. How long it would be before this change would take place he could not say, but the course followed by the clergy of the National Church left little doubt that a change would one day take place. As for Catholics, they could never surrender their schools to the School Boards or any other authority. With the godless education of the Board schools they could never have anything to do." - At the Swansea Congress, the Rev. G. A. Seymour of Winchester maintained that "there is amongst our people a lamentable neglect of the Sacrament of Baptism, and stated that hardly more than ten per cent, of our people in our large towns are baptized in the Church of England. He con- sidered that amongst Christian nations England was in this particular the lowest in the scale, except perhaps America." — Guardian, October 8th, 1879. In the same number, but on another page, of the newspaper from which the above is taken, there appeared a letter signed "A Country Clergy- b xviii INTRODUCTION. Establishment too ill-attended, and in some parts practically empty. Violent changes, from services of a Catholic character to those of a Puritan, and vice versa, have often led to indifference. Zeal in a Catholic direction, having been con- sistently frowned upon by State authorities, has too often been clean stamped out. The churches on Sundays arc thus empty and the streets crowded. What there may we see.? A poor, down-looking, stunted race, with hard features and anxious, care-worn faces ; out of the effeminate mouths of nine out of every ten stumpy men a burnt and smoking pipe sticking out like a spout or drain — the smouldering narcotic of which is supposed, in some manner, to stimulate their enfeebled and flagging energies. These pitiable forms seem, all of them, at once so self-engrossed and restless, eagerly hurrying on to growl over or gnaw the world's meat which perisheth, that no ray, even the faintest, of the beautiful life to come ever seems to fall upon their thronged and darkened pathway. For faith is dead. They believe only in that which they can handle and clutch. Of the angel-world and the supernatural, of times when the veil around this earth is drawn aside, and glimpses of another world are in mercy momentarily bestowed, they neither know nor care. Their gods and guides are the men of science, falsely so called, or, to rise to a somewhat higher level, it may be man," which ran thus. The words in italics and within brackets are my own comments: — "Sir, — An unbaptized child died in my parish the other day. Immediately I heard of it I went to the house and otTered to show my respect [for ils parents -uha had shtdiously despised our Lord's com7nand\ and sympathy Wor them under the stupid charges which belirc'crs in the Christian religion mi^ht j/ia/ce] by officiating at the funeral [contrary' to the rules of the Prayer- Book and the law of the land]. I explained that I would put on my surplice and say the Lord's Prayer at the grave. My offer was most gratefully accepted. I used the following short service, compiled from Bishop How's " Pastor in parochia," and from our own services [and so proved to the parents and the public that baptism is a mere ceremony, and that the U7ibaptized have quite as mtich right to Christian burial by the parson as the baptized. Atn I 7iot liberal luith the trust lohich has been reposed in me ?] I gave the relatives a copy of the prayer, with which they were much pleased." — In the Reunion jlfao-azinc, vol. i. pp. 51-73, is an article on " Baptism in the Church of England," from the pen of a layman (as is said), in which some carefully- arranged statistics show that in some parishes just four per cent, of the children born, and no more, are baptized ; in others, on an average about nine per cent. On pp. 494-498 are letters which show that Bishop Alford, who has " warned people to be on their guard against the fashionable doctrine of Baptismal Regeneration," openly baptized fourteen adults by once flicking his wetted fmgers in the air over all of them, and that in a large Oxfordshire town the font has never been filled for forty years. Cardinal Newman and Mr. Robert Brett long ago pointed out the neglect of baptism, as also did the Rev. W. J. E. Bennett of Frome. INTRODUCTION. xix their own bellies. Their dismal gospel is summed up in the popular but dread resolution— "Let us eat and drink, for to- morrow we die." Therefore they all make our nation now stand out as a striking contrast to " Merry England of the olden time." As to many rural districts, the spirit of indifference, like a dark cloud, has settled on the once happy homes of our country poor. The State religion, on which the Reformation impress is still indelibly stamped,^ influences them but feebly, if at all. In Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Buckinghamshire, and South Wales many of the village churches, week by week, are practically empty. In towns, dissent still breeds ; while unbelief, chilling its thousands to the heart's core, leaves them desolate and sad ; restless in the present, hopeless for the future, or quietly indifferent. For, beginning with the elementary doctrine of Baptism, every detail of sacred revelation has long been a topic of controversy, wrangled over by the misbelieving and profane. Faith has at length so melted into opinion or mere sentiment, that even the home of opinion, now swept and garnished, is found to be cold, empty, and desolate. There is neither voice nor language, nor any to answer, nor any to regard. Some few by custom still superstitiously expose their phylactery and quote their favourite texts— like the ancient dame, who, as she asserted, found such personal comfort from mumbling over and over again the con- soling word "Mesopotamia"; but a supernatural law (as it is assumed to be) without a lawful interpreter, a religion without a divine guide, or a so-called "spiritual body" without a spiritual head, can only first lose the confidence, and then deservedly meritthe contempt, of those who for generations can trace the dire influence of "reform," and long for a divine peace, for- feited and lost in past centuries; gone perhaps, for those few who most keenly miss it, never to return. The only persons who have duly surveyed and accurately measured the situation as to profit by it are the modern Latitudinarians or Liberals — the legitimate successors of Socinus, ^ " I have known the Communion Table used as a writing-desk for Sunday- school children and at vestry meetings."— Kev. W. H. Kelke, Records of Bucks, vol. iii. p. 127.— In a small but curious volume, Odds and Ends (London, 1872), Mr. William Maskell gives an account of an unique atrocity —the dissection, in the year 1839, of a corpse that had been exhumed, upon the Communion Table of the church of Powderstock, in Dorsetshire. "The church," he writes, "was shut up for three weeks after, on account of the stench ^^'hich had penetrated through and saturated the entire building. I believe," he continues, "that the Communion Table was then restored to its former sacred purpose." — Pp. 54-73. XX INTRODUCTION. Cranmer, Erastus, Tillotson, Hoadley, and Balguy. And, since the rise of the Oxford movement, the leaders of it, in their conflicts with Latitiuhnarians, have, by reason of their losses and disasters, been again and again compelled to shift their position, modify their ])rinciples,^ and change their tactics. Persons professing the Catholic faith, out of communion with the rest of Christendom, inevitably maintain tiieir difficult position under the greatest disadvantages. No one could have fought the battle of Catholic dogma in the Church of England with greater foresight, discretion, and ability, than did Dr. Newman when at Oxford. But with all his consummate tact and immense learn- ing, with all his high generosity and notorious zeal, he frankly and truly confessed himself defeated.^ The Liberals or Latitudin- arians won in almost every conflict. With what result is well known. Dr. Newman and his friends were driven out ; while Dr. Tait, one of the four tutors who persecuted him, is at Canterbury, and is still bent on getting rid of the Athanasian Creed, in which he frankly avows neither he himself nor his ^ E.g. the late Rev. John Keble in the poem on "Gunpowder Treason," having relinquished the inexact belief of the Reformers for the teaching of the Catholic Church, somewhat awkwardly altered his verse. See p. 40, where the original poem is quoted. — Still more recently, Archdeacon Denison, who took so prominent a part in the restoration of Convocation, deplored his mistake in having done so ; believing, because of later events, that Convocation had done more harm than good. The truth is, that until the question of the relations of England to the rest of Christendom is faced and settled little can or will be done. ^ "The most oppressive thought in the whole process of my change of opinion was the clear anticipation, verified by the event, that it would issue in the triumph of Liberalism. Against the anti-dogmatic principle I had thrown my whole mind ; yet now I was doing more than any one else could do to proniote it. I was one of those who liad kept it at bay in Oxford for so many years ; and thus my very retirement was its triumph. 'llic men zv/io Jiad driven mefrorn Oxford were distinctly the Liberals : it was they 'mIw had opened the attack upon Tract 90, and it 7vas they who would gain a second benefit if I tvcnt on to retire from the Anglican Church. But this was not all. As I have already said, there are but two alternatives, the way to Rome and the way to atheism ; Anglicanism is the half-way house on the other. How many men were there, as I knew full well, who would not follow me now in my advance from Anglicanism to Rome, but would at once leave Anglicanism and me for the Liberal camp. It is not at all easy (humanly speaking) to wind up an Englishman to a dogmatic level. I had done so in a good measure in the case both of young men and of laymen, the Anglican J'ia Media being the representative of dogma. The dogmatic and the Anglican principle were one, as I had taught tliem ; but I was breaking the Jla Media to pieces, and would not dogmatic faith altogether be broken up, in the minds of a great number, by the demolition of the Via Mtdia? (Jh I how unliappy this made me ! " -History of my Kcli_!iioiis Opinions, by J. M. Newman, D. U. (original edition), pp. 329, 330. London, 1S64. INTRODUCTION. XXl brother-prelates believe,^ it being too dogmatic in itself, and too distasteful to the public. Dr. Hampden died Bishop of Here- ford. The editor of Essays and Reviews is now Bishop of Exeter, welcomed by High Churchmen for his zeal and energy. The present Bishop of Salisbury, who so disliked Dr. Newman's Essay on Development that he formerly replied to it, has himself so developed in the Latitudinarian direction that he actually administered the Lord's Supper at Westminster to a Unitarian preacher. Thus the Liberals — aided, of course, by their own political party, and bribed and promoted by the Conservatives • — triumph all along the line. And so-called " High Churchmen " have at length condescended to be their faithful armour-bearers and trumpeters. The spring of these Liberals or Erastians is elastic, and their grasp firm, as when, rising to shake themselves from the temporary dust of any conflict with High Churchmen, they sufficiently realise their own strength, and, with disdain for their discomfited opponents and with considerable self-confidence, march forward to greater victories. They know too well that the power of the English Establishment either to maintain or to enforce the dogmatic principle is as the power of a lifeless and rain-sodden scarecrow, neither more nor less. They perceive most accurately that the authority which first created the Establishment, and, as is reasonable enough, still effectually dominates it, intends to dominate it. This every bishop sees and knows.- That power was Parliament ; it is now Parliament, modified,, reformed, and extended, — ever influenced in the present enlightened age by public opinion ; but, at best. Parliament. ^ "We [the archbishop and bishops] do not — there is not a soul in this room who does — take the concluding clauses of the Athanasian Creed in their plain and literal sense." — Speech of Archbishop Tail in Convocation, Guardian, February 14th, 1S72. " Quite recently the Bishop of Oxford, somewhat misconceiving his position, went in person as a suppliant to the Court of Queen's Bench, asking that he might be allowed to act as a true bishop in his own diocese. But the Court, which of course represents Her Majesty the Queen, — the Supreme Governess of the Church of England, from whom (as Dr. jNIackarness on his knees before her duly acknowledged) he received both spiritualties as well as temporalties, — declined to allow him to do anything of the sort. Lord Penzance is now the Chief Ecclesiastical Judge for Iler Majesty in every diocese ; in Oxford as elsewhere. He was set up by a recent and special Act, which either all the bishops helped to pass, or now willingly administer; and therefore Bishop Mackarness' demand was obviously unreasonable. The Act in question, though with art and cunning made specially for the inferior parsons, is thus found to have included the bishops. The Bishop of London has recently admitted, in his "Charge" (1879), that it was both a mistake and a failure. xxii INTRODUCTION. However, the very boldness of these triumphant Erastians in high places, their sharply-defined and sweeping policy, carried out with no regard to the convictions of their opponents, and with an inconsiderate roughness and rudeness worthy of Thomas Cromwell or Hugh Latimer, has done more than anything else to throw many Christian people back on first principles. So long as some moderation and impartiality were shown at Lam- beth ; so long as it was possible to believe by a kind of traditional fiction that the so-called " Church Courts " were Church Courts, people, without inquiring, were content to regard them as such, and quietly to acquiesce. But the Public Worship Regulation Act 1 has successfully destroyed all such notions ; while the appointment by the two Primates of an ex-judge of the Divorce Court to work the Act was a deliberate insult to the Christian clergy, and an outrage disgraceful to all concerned.- It has, at all events, shown conclusively the true character of the Establish- ment and its rulers — a singular advantage to those who, like the late Mr. Keble, have been long doubtful whether it was from heaven or of men.^ As long, of course, as people cannot 1 " It is, in point of fact— at least, so it seems to me — a thoroughly revolu- tionary measure in its principle, having for its main end or consequence the abolition of all the ancient courts Christian ; courts which, however fallen from their first estate and unsatisfactory in their present condition, have existed from the very earliest times in this country, and were an integral part of its Christianity ; and the substitution in their stead of a new secular court, with no Christian instincts or traditions whatever to guide it, and deriving its authority and jurisdiction in no way whatever from the Church, but entirely fiom the new Act of Parliament which created it. Regarded in this light, which I believe to be the true light, and one, I fear, which the verdict of posterity will only too fully endorse, the Public Worship Regulation Act of last year is one of the most mischievous and indefensible measures ever yet concocted. For it is the virtual triumph of the anti-Christian principle of Erastianism over ecclesiastical authority and independence ; the acknowledg- ment, in practical effect, by the voice of the nation, that the Established Church of England is to be regarded from hencefurth as little belter than a mere State function or department of the earthly State, instead of (as it must be if it be Christ's representative) its spiritual ruler and teacher."— C/^m/ or Casar^ part ii. pp. 6, 7. London, 1877. - " I do not suppose a more galling insult to a body of educated gentlemen, such as the clergy of England a\e, is recorded in history than that which has been practically offered to us by the two archbishops (Tail and Thomson) in the peculiar character of the appointment they have thought fit to make." — CliriU or Cccsar? by A. I). Wagner, Chancellor of Chichester Cathedral, part ii. p. 10. London, 1877. 3 " I suppose, from some part of your letter, that you have been told I am speaking to friends occasionally as if I was perplexed about continuing where I am. My perplexity is rather what to say to others who ask my advice, than how to act myself. Few persons have a stronger feeling than I of the duty of continuing where one's lot is cast, except where the call to go else- INTRODUCTION, XXlll perceive the evils which exist, so long no remedy can possibly be forthcoming. In the sixteenth century breach with Rome, i\\e first point and position repudiated was that the Pope, either by divine right or of ecclesiastical necessity, had any reason, duty, or call to inter- fere with the concerns of the Church of England. The English Church was affirmed to be, of itself, a perfect and complete spiritual kingdom, wanting neither advice, assistance, nor inter- ference from without. On this point the new Statute of Appeals ^ was very clear. Having thus deliberately removed the key-stone to the perfect arch of truth and unity, other stones, one after the other, some large, some small, were more easily taken out and thrown aside ; with what eventual result to that divinely- built arch every one can now too plainly perceive. Many of these stones (to carry on the simile), long lost or lying neglected amongst surrounding rubbish, have been painfully discovered and carefully replaced. For this no Christian patriot can be too heartily grateful. Newman, Pusey, Manning, Keble, Marriott, and Robert Wilberforce, amongst others, did the work. But the last stone to be secured and put up again in the order of time, though the chiefest in importance and most needed (because without it the others are unbonded together, and the spiritual construction remains inherently imperfect), is the key-stone of the completed arch, — the primacy of the father of the faithful, — of him who, in Christ's Name, guides both pastors and sheep, as patriarch of the Church Universal. A visible ruler for a diocese, and a primate for a province, reasonably imply the need of one visible head for the whole family. The day has not yet dawned for this crowning work of the Tractarian movement to be undertaken. But though some for politic reasons, timorous or crotchety, may deny its importance, everything points silently where is very plain. It may be that I do not see my way clearly in the controversy between us a- id Rome; but as long as I was in doubt, and perhaps a good deal longer than I might seem to myself in speculation to be so, I should think it my duty to stay where I am." — Memoir of Kev. John Keble, by Sir J. T. Coleridge, p. 230. London, 1869. 1 The words of this innovating statute are : — " The body spiritual whereof having power, when any cause of the law divine happened to come in question, or of spiritual learning, then it was declared, interpreted, and showed by that part of the body politic called the spiritualty, now being usually called the English Church, which always hath been reputed and also found of that sort, that both for knowledge, integrity, and sufficiency of number, it hath been always thought, and is also at this hour sufficient and meet of itself without the intermeddling of any exterior person or persons, to declare and determine all such doubts, and to administer all such duties as to their rooms spiritual doth appertain." XXIV INTRODUCTION. to the certain issue indicated. In the ^fstructive Reformation of the sixteenth century the Pope wasjirs/ repudiated, then certain doctrines and practices ; in the better and r^^structive move- ment of the present day, the lost doctrines have already been recovered ; an acknowledgment of the traditional and reasonable rights of the See of St. Peter ^ will naturally come /asf ; at all events with those Christians in the Establishment who, by co-operation and reunion, are prepared to resist latitudinarianism, false science, Erastianism, and blank infidelity, so dangerous in these latter days, so potent, so diabolical. The labour may be painful, the cost considerable, some may be even working against their will, the sacrifices may be great ; but for all these the work will be surely and efficiently com- pleted.2 And it will be completed from within.^ Beneficent and practical reformers from all sides, and of all sorts, mainly Liberals, are still at work upon its further " reform " ; ever mending, tinkering, and changing it. There is surely room, therefore, ^ The statement that "the Bishop of Rome hath no jurisdiction in this reahn of England " (Art. xxvii.) has long ceased to be an accurate proposition. In the present day it is plainly contrary to obvious facts. Under altered circumstances, Parliament ought now to construct another Article, harmonis- ing with parliamentary changes. Again : the 2Sth Article pronounces a certain doctrine concerning the Sacrament of the Altar to be " rejuignant to the plain words of Scripture. " Now the plain words are these : — "This is my Body." Consequently when our Lord said, "This is My Body," the plain meaning of these words was " This is ;/<>/ My Body." By parity of reasoning, had our Lord said, " This is )io( My Body," the plain meaning of His words would have been — transubstantiation. On the same principle, when there came a voice from heaven — " This is My beloved Son," it is "repugnant to the plain words of Scripture" to suppose that the Eternal Father revealed the hypostatic union ; but if the Eternal Father had affirmed, " This is «(;/ My beloved Son," the plain meaning would have been what in short every good Christian believes— erroneously as it would seem on such " Elizabethan " principles of interpretation — to be true. - About a century and a half ago, this was prophesied as sure to come to pass. Our Blessed Saviour appeared in a vision to a humble Catholic, who was constantly asking at the throne of grace for the restoration of the ancient faith, and He said : " My son, I have heard your prayer so often poured out before Me; I will have mercy upon England." "When, Lord; oh! when?" "Not now," rejilied our Blessed .Saviour, "but when England shall build as many churches as she destroyed at the cliange of religion ; and when she shall restore and beautify the remainder." — .See, for this account at length, T/w Future Unity of Christendovi, by A. L. I*, de Lisle, p. 68. London, 1857. •* The Church of England points out with great clearness how this may be done, by its very distinct directions concerning conditional baptism. What is ajiplicable to the Sacrament of Regeneration is, of course, of equal applicability to confirmation, orders, etc. INTRODUCTION. XXV within its wide- embracing fold and comprehensive boundaries, for those few -who, having reached a somewhat higher and clearer altitude than that ordinarily attained by their fellows in the fog and mist below, can plainly see that all such destructive " reforms " (judging by past experience) are likely to turn out as profitless and worthless as those of previous centuries ; and who long for the religious oneness of old. The English people were promised national unity in religion, but this was never secured to them — poor dupes ! even though gibbet and butcher's knife, rack and torture, were enlisted in the enterprising work ; and now, instead of the unity of bygone centuries, they are cursed with the active dissensions and noisy screams of a hundred and fifty discordant and repulsive sects. Who will say, then, that it would be unwise and unreasonable for the National Church, or at all events for those within its broad borders who still believe in the Christian revelation, to admit its failure, and by combination strive to cause its acknow- ledged isolation and impotence to come to an end ? There are very few members of the Church of England who do not now admit that, whatever its deserts, disestablishment, disendowment, and disruption are not unlikely to be its eventual fate. They only differ as to when these final "reforms," as they term them, are likely to take place. For since the Primate of Christendom has been robbed and disendowed at Rome, — England having stood admiringly by,— local institutions of a similar kind are not likely to survive for long. Why, then, should not such a disastrous issue for our beloved country be duly looked in the face and prepared for ? Those who in the National Church still believe in God the Trinity, in the Incarna- tion of the Eternal Word, and in that divine corporation (baptism being the gate of entrance to- it) the One Catholic Church, should on every ground visibly unite, not only amongst themselves, but v/ith all other parts of God's one family (by regeneration). The various recent movements for corporate reunion ^ prove that men's hearts are now, thank God ! being, to some extent, turned away from strife and contention towards peace, co-operation, and unity. Furthermore, as a practical consideration, in the Church of England, the universal liberty which is granted to all cannot be denied only to those who hold the Catholic faith -^ in its ^ See Appendix, No. II., p. 358. 2 " Far was it from the purpose of the Church of England to forsake and reject the Churches of Italy, France, Spain, Germany, or any such-like Churches." — Canon, No. xxx. of 1603. XXVI INTRODUCTION. integrity ; and who, witnessing the miserable divisions around and about, aim at removing them and healing the breaches. As citizens they have a perfect and unchallenged right, through their natural birth, to all the privileges of membership of the Established Church, just as baptized persons (if baptized) they have an equal right to all the privileges of the Church Universal. These latter privileges, if refused or denied to them in the public edifices of the national communion (in which the national will is dominant), they not only have a similar right, but own a positive duty to secure for themselves in some other way. Furthermore, by argument and reasoning they are free to promote change, so as, without destruction or revolution, to seek out the old ways and return to the ancient paths. To the few— they are sure to be "Liberals" — who may un- fairly deny to others that liberty which they so constantly claim for themselves, and who may urge "patience," love for our stepmother, and "loyalty"; to those likewise who may prate about disloyalty to the Church of England, the author may reply in the forcible words of another : — " What and where is the Church of England to which I am disloyal? So far as the Church of England is identified with Christian doctrine, Christian worship, Christian discipline, and upholds and maintains these, I am as loyal and as devoted to her now as I ever was, or as any one else can be. But what is meant by the Church of England in connection with the idea of loyalty to the Church of England? Is it the Church of England of the High Church party, or of the Low Church party, or of the Broad Church party? for the members of these three parties seem to me to mean quite different things by the phrase 'Church of England.' Is it a book two hundred years old ? or a tradition? or a sentiment ? or the will of the nation ? or a body corporate — a living organisation? If it be a living organisation, how does it make its voice heard? for a society in which there is ' no voice nor any that answereth' is not the Church of God. As an individual clergy- man, I have long been asking myself, ' What is my authority for what I teach and do?' To my mind the responsibility of teaching others in matters affecting their salvation— a responsibility at all times great and overwhelming — becomes absolutely insupportable when there is no living authority to which the individual teacher can refer, and by which he can be guided and forti- fied."^ 'J'he author of this volume docs not profess that it is a history of the reign of the successful but miserable woman who ruled the nation's destinies for nearly forty-five years, and regarding whom the common herd entertain such loose but glowing ideas. It is only intended to be a sketch of the state of the Church during that period. To write the history of the years between ' Do they ivell to be Aitgiy? by Presbyter Anglicanus, p. 26. London, 1876. INTRODUCTION. XXVU Elizabeth's accession and her death would involve the production of many large volumes. Here the author's aim has been to pro- vide a plain and readable account of what actually occurred, as far as it practically bears on the new ecclesiastical position, upon which recent events have thrown so clear and powerful a light ; and, in so doing, neither to keep in the background unpleasant and unwelcome facts — a policy successfully adopted by so many Church of England writers — nor so to lay on heavily the dull colours of a somewhat dark picture as, by finishing-touches, to make it at all darker than it need be. For this there is no necessity whatsoever. The naked acts of certain of those who had secured the upper hand, plainly and faithfully recorded, either from their own words or from authentic documents, are decidedly not pleasant reading for simple-minded folks who reverently believe that what some persons term "the Reforma- tion " was another sacred Pentecost, and had for its Divine Author (may God pardon their delusion ! ) the Holy Spirit of Truth. As this book is passing through the press, a friend, who has efficiently aided me, calls my attention to a statement of fact extracted from one of the ritualistic newspapers, concerning the so-called " Reformers," which is here appended : — "They began by making the Holy Eucharist contemptible in the eyes of the nation, and went on to make it unusual as well as slovenly. The com- plaint of the people under Edward VI. that the altars had been in many places turned into ' oyster-boards ' was not, as has been falsely alleged, a coarsely ribald perversion of facts. It was the literal truth. Wherever the more Zwinglian bishops and clergy had their way, it was no such structure as that which we see to-day in every fairly decent English church, in shape, size, position, and covering — in short, every way except being of wood instead of stone — like the old altars, which served for the celebration of the Sacra- ment. Common trestles and boards (just like those on which even still street vendors of shell-fish exhibit their wares) carried in and out of church with exactly the same care and quietness as they are now used for a school- room tea, were what the astonished people saw ; and the Sacrament dis- pensed with as much studious irreverence as if the minister had intended nothing save to make it contemptible. Then, besides, M'hereas up to 1549 there was not a corner of England where there was not at least a weekly mass accessible, and very few where there was not a daily one within easy reach, the first result of the Zwinglian action in 1552 was to sweep away the daily mass^ everywhere, and the t)unday mass, as it would seem, in a number ^ The person who could deliberately write of the Elizabethan Reformers' Supper as a "mass" must be either a profound ignoramus or as daring as he is impudent and dishonest. For the celebration of mass was distinctly abolished by Act of Parliament; while those priests who were fci-' vrele- brating it were drawn, hung, and quartered. Grindal, Pilkington, a\.l Sandys had no more intentions of " saying mass " than they had of restoring circumcision. xxviii INTRODUCTION. of places, at once considerable, and rapidly becoming the great majority. And in the third place, whereas the mass had been from the earliest days of Christendom the chief, and for more than a thousand years the most public, rite of the Church, it was not now merely made infrequent, but was hustled, as it were, into a corner, just as if a thing to be ashamed of; and the evil custom sprang up, albeit not justified then or since by any rubric or canon, of restricting all knowledge of it to the small and steadily dwindling band of actual communicants on each occasion. "■— C/«/;r/i Times, September 26th, 1879. As regards English ordinations, concerning which some new facts are brought to light in the following pages, — putting aside both historical and theological dissertations, which might appa- rently be carried on without profit or conviction to either pharanx of disputants, until the day of doom, — it is self-evident that the moral argument in favour of their validity is certainly very strong, perhaps stronger than either the theological or historical argument. ^Vhen the frightful state of degradation into which the National Church during Elizabeth's reign had been brought is honestly contemplated ; and when the striking contrast between its position then and its altered state now is duly realised, — the manner in which so much that had been then cast away as valueless is now sought after and has been once more secured; the beautiful restoration of cathedrals, abbeys, and parish churches ; the rebuilding of new ones after Catholic models; the renewed interest in all ecclesiastical subjects by an earnest and self-denying minority; the restored worship, the living zeal, the obvious results, — we may reasonably infer (though there be no exact precedent nor perfect parallel in past history for the complex character and unique^ position of the Established Church of England) that, as divine grace has never been withdrawn from her crippled rulers, so an in- herent and essential distinction between clergy and laity has been, in the main, consistently and continually remarked and admitted. If the author's intention had been to rake up old scandals, the materials for which are at hand and in abundance, it might have been done with ease. But this, in the main, has been carefully and charitably avoided. For such work would have been in every way distasteful to him. It is only where dis- agreeable features serve to give an accurate impression of the ' "The results of the religious movement of the time had taken shape under the resolute but cautious hand of the (^ueen [Elizabeth] in a church polity 7iages 166-199 CHAPTER VII. Abbot John Feckenham. — Bishop Cocks' ingenuity. — A preacher for the recusants. — The Worthingtons of Worthington. — Two youths scandalously ill-treated. — Flogged and imprisoned. — Richard Topcliffe the torture-master. — Death of several bishops. — Importance of the old nobility. — Persecution of Thomas and George Fisher. — Stripped and Hogged. — Defence by the boys. — ■ Laxness of discipline. — The Queen suffers from toothache. — Aylmer sacrifices himself. — -Elizabeth's Progresses. — She visits the East of England. — Outrageous treatment of Rookwood. — Beggars abound. — Character of the parish churches. — Beauty and power of the Old Faith. — Charity of our Catholic ancestors. — Seventy- two priests banished. — The "declining in religion." — Remedies for the same. — Sir Francis Walsingham's cure. — Father Sherwin's constancy. — Various tortures inflicted. — Father Brian tortured. — • Mysterious and supernatural tokens. — Misbelief and unbelief. — - The Cross of St. Donat's. — Inquiry concerning it. — Prophecy of the Great Rebellion. — Gaol-plague at Oxford. — Case of Roland Jenks the bookseller. — His trial and unjust condemnation. — Numbers die suddenly. — A judge's blooded hand. — Education in the religious houses.— Low state of education. — Grammar schools founded. — Placed under the bishops. — Good position of the schoolmasters. — The case of William Carter.— Hammond and Kett burnt at the stake. — Dr. Allen's publications. — New Acts of Parliament passed. — Whittingham, Dean of Durham. — Sandys and Ilutton disagree. — Foreign Protestant orders recognised. — ■ The case of Travers. — Richard Hooker at the Temple. ^ — Arch- bishop W'hitgift's action. — State of morals in London. — The Bishops' Visitation Articles. — Frightful state of the New Church. — Blasphemy and absurdity rampant, . . /''^'-'■^ 200-230 CHAPTER VIII. Some account of Edmund Grindal. — He declines to put down "pro- phesyings." — Case of Mrs. Anne Landers. — State of the fabrics of the churches. — Churchyards neglected and unenclosed. — Number of churches pulled down. — The case of Mary, Queen of Scots. — Her relation to the English crown. — Jealousy of foreign inter- ference. — Her treatment by lilizabeth. — " Babington's plot." — ■ Spies, counterfeiters, and forgers. — Seven gentlemen executed. — CONTENTS. XXXvii Leicester proposes poison.— Trial at Fotheringhay.— A twofold charge made.— Trickery and forgery adopted.— The Queen found guilty.— Elizabeth's reluctance to act. -Hesitates to commit murder.— But suggests assassination.— The bishops and peers seek Mary's death.- Elizabeth's insincerity and hypocrisy. Queen Mary learns her fate.— Her dying requests.— The King" of France intervenes.— Poulet declines to become an assassin.— Ihe Earl of Kent's insolence.— Queen Mary's last night on earth.— Affection for her of her servants. — Her maids-of-waiting denied her.— Preparations for her death.— Sir Amias Poulet's last service. —Queen Mary's last public words.— The Dean of Peterborough preaches.— Her dying prayer.— She is led to the block and murdered.— Her burial and subsequent removal- Indignation of Catholic Europe. —Davison sacrificed. —Lord Stourton and Father Cornelius. — Vision of Father Cornelius.— The case of Margaret Clitheroe.— Accusation and trial.— L-reverent buffoons in court.— Her firmness and fidelity.— Wigginton's protest.— She is con- demned to be pressed to death.— Implored to renounce the Faith. —Day of her martyrdom.— Her inhuman treatment.— Her fearful and final sufferings.— Mistress Ward and Mistress Ann Line put to death.— Walsingham opposes King Philip.— Preparations agamst the Spanish invasion.— Enthusiasm of the people. Patriotism of the Catholics.— Cardinal Allen's "Admonition."— The Queen's deeds set forth.— The Pope sanctions King Philip's scheme. — Failure of the Armada.— Non-sacrament ministers. Popularity of the " Prophesyings. "—Their consequences.— Evenmg Communion a substantial meal. — Its profanity. Con- trast between Mass and the " Supper."— Richard Hooker and his works.— Forms a new party in the Establishment. — Lax opinions concerning ordination.— Whittingham, King, Alwood, and De Saravia. — De Saravia the confessor of Hooker.— Influence of Hooker's writings, ..... pages 231-272 Correspondence concerning the proposed private assassination of Mary, Queen of Scots, .... pages 272-275 CHAPTER IX. Excitement, confusion, and disorder rampant.— Insolence of the preachers.— Matrimonial Inquisitions objected to.— External religious rites disused. — The churches empty.— Militant dis- putation at Breachfa.— Parishes destitute.— Bishop Nicholas Robmson. — Churches like Jews' synagogues.— Representations of the Queen and Her Royal Arms.— Her Majesty criticised and prayed for.— Further "reforms" desired.— Some persons Gallio- like and mdifferent.— The gibbet and hangman in requisition.— Forgers, fabricators, and skulks.— Nine priests and ten laymen executed.— Hackett, Coppinger, and Arthington.— Dislike of the she-Supremacy.— More hanging-posts constructed.— Fresh enact- ments made.— Fresh acts of persecution and cruelty.— Absentees from church severely punished.— The case of Philip, Earl of XXXVIU CONTENTS. Arundel. — His trial. — His cruel treatment by the Queen. — Subsequently poisoned. — His death and burial. — His Countess ill- treated. — Esciuire Edward Sulyard. — Many gentlepeople perse- cuted. — The case of John Towneley of Towneley, Esquire. — The case of Esquire Thomas Pounde. — His appearance at Court. — His retirement therefrom. — Complete change in his life. — Is charged, imprisoned, and tortured. — Is subsequently released. — Again imprisoned. — He publishes Campion's "Challenge." — The places of his imprisonment. — His final trial in the Star Chamber. • — His life of devotion and self-denial. — The Old Church and the New. — Poonde dies at his old house of Belmont. — Horsley starved, and eaten by rats. — Many villages depopulated. — ^John Ingram suspended by his wrists. — John Pearson, a priest, most infamously treated. — Dickenson and Milner executed. — Seven maiden ladies condemned. — Greenwood and Barrow executed. — The Marlin-Marprelate Tracts. — Henry Penry executed. — The Royal Supremacy newly defined. — The Dean of Durham's report. — Fidelity of the Catholics. — Adherents of the Old Religion. — Failure and unpopularity of the New, . . tages 276-306 CHAPTER X. Elizabeth's personal bloodthirstiness. — Seminary-hunting. — Heartless cruelty of the Queen. — Fabrication of plots and false rumours. — Spies, agents, and falsehood-mongers. — Conjurors and spirit- seekers. — Loss of five sacraments. — Vast increase of superstition. — Dr. Dee's invocations and conjuring. — Dee's female servant commits suicide. — Popularity of the occult arts. — Lopez the Queen's physician. — Ferreira and Louis. — Three Portuguese hung. — Frightful exhibition at Tybourne. — Several obscure pre- lates. — Dr. John Whitgift. — His boldness. — Protest against further sacrilege. — Bishop Coldwell of Salisbury. — Neglect of Confirmation. — The question of Episcopacy. — Whitgift's un- certain utterances. — Rebels preaching obedience. — The case of Robert Southwell. — Tortured thirteen times. — Cruelly used in Bridewell. — Seized and confined in the Tower. — His father petitions the Queen on his behalf. — Indicted as a traitor. — Burghley's brutality. — Southwell denies the charges made. — Con- demned, hung, and quartered. — His devotion, meekness, and patience. — His heroic bearing and death. — "The oflences of our forefathers." — The case of Henry Walpole. — Seized in the North. — Is tortured fourteen times. — Ill-treated, and imprisoned.— Accused of denying the Supremacy. — Condemned 10 death. — Benedictines, Franciscans, and Jesuits. — The Queen's general pardon. — Sir John Harington and the State bishops. — The "Bright Occidental Star." — Elizabeth's learning. — Her un- bounded vanity. — -Her greed of admiration.— Her remarkable indecision. — Rules and corrects the bisho])s and clergy. — Her personal characteristics. — Peculiarity of her portraits. — The churches and ministers avoided. — "Greasing and patting of CONTENTS. xxxix pates" despised. — Orsini, Duke of Graciano. — She is prepared to receive him. — The Queen dances before him.— Shows him her private chapel. — Weakness and paralysis supervene. — Her in- creasing ailments. — She is no longer "frolicksome." — Much perturbed at last. — Suspects every one and is terrified. — Her ministers await her death. — Abject condition of the wretched woman. — Her confession to Lord Nottingham. — She dies in a state of insensibility. — The world's judgment of her. — Her un- principled policy. — How the changes under her were effected. — Scandals passed over. — The Establishment dominated by Parlia- ment. — The Royal Supremacy. — The Church of the Living God. — What the " Homilies " maintained. — The Reformation either a dire necessity or a dreadful crime. — History most artfully per- verted. — Destruction of Unity, Order, and Peace. — Weakening of Authority, both civil and religious. — Present confusion. — Value of the National Church. — Its position and importance. — ■ Modern clerical reformers. — The Church of England's past trials and enemies. — Changes which are improvements. — Need of Change.- — Corporate Reunion the greatest need of all. — Influence of Erastianism. ■ — Importance of discretion, zeal, and charity, ....... pages 2,0-] -ZAS Appendix No. I., . . . . . . . 347 Appendix No. II., ...... 358 Appendix No. III., ...... 364 Index, ........ 365 THE CHURCH QUEEN ELIZABETH. CHAPTER I. Henry VIH. had died, in despair, a dreadful death, terrible to have looked upon, on January 28, 1547 ; was buried with pomp and ceremony at Windsor, and then speedily forgotten. The prayers and masses which, by his long and elaborate will, he had so earnestly desired might be said for his soul in perpetuity, were never said at all. The desolator of other men's graves, and, worse than this, of God's sanctuaries, was thus himself left desolate and unremembered in a deserted sanctuary where the lamps had been put out, and from which the Adorable Presence had departed. Then as to his children. Edward VI., a sickly, fanatical, and debilitated youth, — bred in heresy, brought up in schism, flattered by those who ought to have known better,^ and pampered with cant ; until, under such tuition, he had become an offensive and unbearable prig,^ — ^was happily removed by Pro- ^ Roger Ascham, when writing to the Duke of Somerset, in 1547, spoke of the king as a juvenile Josiah, a virginal youth, so pure in himself, and so perfect in the new gospel, that he could not be suspected even of the smallest inclination towards, or attachment for, the whore of Babylon. On another occasion (a. D. 1550), Cranmer made himself ridiculous by the following out- rageous flattery, which he personally put forth to Cheke, the young king's tutor : — " Ah, Master Cheke, you may be glad all the days of your life that you have such a scholar; for he hath more divinity in his little finger than all we {the bishops) have in our bodies." — Preface to Foreign Kalendar, by J. Stevenson, p. 47. A 2 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. vidence to another world, in the midst of his Protestant uncle's disreputable and disastrous rule, and before further and greater evils for the nation had been sealed. Queen Mary, King Henry's lawful daughter, did a noble work in restoring to the Church tithes and first-fruits ; in bringing back certain of the religious orders, such as the Benedictines and Bridgetines, to their old homes ; and in vainly endeavouring to stem the tide of innovation, error, and profanity. She duly deposed some of the bishops, who, having been monks, had broken their vows of celibacy and chastity— amongst whom were John Bird and Robert Holgate.^ More especially does she merit the sincerest admiration from all who believe in one Body, one Spirit, and one Hope of the Christian calling, for having, under lawful authority, visibly reunited desolate England to the rest of Christendom once again. The service of reconciliation in Westminster Abbey on November 30th, 1554, when the Cardinal-Archbishop of Canterbury solemnly absolved the nation from its sin of schism, was the public ratification of a grand deed of Christian charity done in her reign, which, in the great and terrible day when all works are to be tested, shall surely be found to cover a multitude of sins ; and which, even in our own national life and history, may yet render her pleasant name — " the sweetest name that ever woman bore," — so much and so unjustly maligned, sweet to the memory of all who, notwith- standing divisions in the sad origin of which they had no share, still claim the sacred and honoured appellation of Catholic, and are constantly labouring and praying for the gift of visible unity once more upon earth. Queen Mary at length found that peace which, by experience, ^ " We need not delay long over these two names. Jlolgate of York and Bird of Chester were respectively a Gilbertine monk and a Carmelite friar, and as .'■uch had, amongst other vows, taken tlie vow of celibacy. Holgate married after he was ajipointed to \'ork, as he himself alleges, to please the Duke of Somerset. Protestants give him the character of being covetous and worklly-mindctl ; and Burnet admits that though ho went along with Cranmer, who got him promoted from Llandaff to York, yet he was no credit to the Reformation. He has left little or nothing by which his opinions may be ascertained, and the principal thing known to his discredit was the claim preferred against him at the council-hoard of Edward VI., by one, Norman, that he had carried off his wife. The Council that could wink at Poynel's peccadilloes was not likely to be hard upon Holgate. Tlicy contented themsohes with forbiiUling him to come to Parliament, and then never trou tiled their heads any more about the matter. He lived just long enough to be deprived (March i6th, 1554) by Mary, on the same plea with Bird of Ciiester and the Bishops of .St. David's and Ijristol, viz. that they had married." — The Reformers of the Reigns of Henry VIII. and Edward VI., Union Rcinc-o, vol. viii. p. 526. London, 1S70. CHARACTER OF THE LATE QUEEN MARY. 3 so many discover for themselves the world cannot give, for she died on Thursday, November 17, 1558, on which day Cardinal Reginald Pole went likewise to his blessed and well-earned reward.^ Of his Eminence, Edwin Sandys, in a letter to Bullin- ger, dated 20th December of the same year, thus sneeringly wrote: — " That good cardinal, that he might not raise any dis- turbance or impede the progress of the gospel, departed this life after his friend Mary, ' Maria sua.' Such was the love and harmony between them, that not even death itself could separate them. We have nothing, therefore, to fear from Pole, for ' dead men do not bite.'" ^ This pious queen has been often severely blamed for her punishment of heretics ; and this, not because she caused to be made new and exceptional laws to meet exceptional and unusual difficulties (never the case), but because she could not and did not hinder the lawful authorities from putting into execution very severe laws, long in force and which then existed. A male- factor who, in cold blood, poisons a man or cuts off his head is even now righteously hung. Those decreasing few, who still believe that the spirit of a man is of more importance than his flesh — that the life to come is of more value than the life that now is ; that to poison the soul is at least as heinous a crime as to poison the body — may not, after all, be so irrational or eccentric as they are unjustly assumed to be ; if, while murder, rebellion, and rapine are still severely punished by modern law, they hold that treason, heresy, and perjury deservedly received, under Queen Mary, equally severe punishments. When Elizabeth, the king's natural daughter by Anne Boleyn, was in her teens, her bearing towards the other sex had been, to say the least, unusual and remarkable. Various queer and perhaps questionable stories had been afloat regarding her, some of which were possibly false, and others probably exaggerated. But in one notable case this was not so. Her conduct in relation to Lord Seymour of Sudeley, the Lord Admiral, a married man, in the highest degree reprehensible, caused very grave scandal. But perhaps the chief fault lay with his lordship, and not mainly with the young princess. Seymour is believed by many to have contracted a marriage with Katherine Parr, Henry Vni.'s widow, for convenience' sake, and in order to be near ^ There remains an interesting and well-paintcd portrait of the cardinal, in his official robes, in the dining-hall of Lambeth Palace, with an older and quainter picture in the State drawing-room, evidently a faithful and excellent likeness. - Zitriih Letters, .vol. i. No. 2. 4 Till'. ("IIURCII UNDKR (^)UKEN EI.IZAHKTI I. Eli/,abclh, who resided with, and was under tlie care of, her step- mother. At the period in question, though Ehzabeth was barely fifteen years of age, she was as forward and precocious in know- ledge as she appears to have been altogether lacking in feminine delicacy and maidenly modesty. The familiarities of Lord Seymour which she tolerated were simply disgusting. Elizabeth actually allowed him to enter her sleeping-chamber in his bed- gown and slippers only, before she was out of bed in the morning, and there to indulge in acts and actions gross in the extreme. He struck her with his palms on the back and other parts of her undraped body, and when she roUickingly rolled about under the disordered sheets ; or, hastily slipping out of bed, laughingly hid herself behind the damask curtains, he toyed with her anew both by word and deed, by gross innuendos, scandalous questions of double meaning, and other indelicate words and acts. ()ueen Katherine Parr, aroused by jealousy, coming upon them suddenly one day at Seymour Place, found the princess on her husband's knees, with his left arm round her waist. On this she sent the ])rincess away towards the close of the month of May 1548; but what she had seen and knew, affecting her mind and health, so harassed her, poor lady ! that she soon afterwards died in childbirth. This death happened so opportunely for the Lord Admiral's obvious purpose as regards the princess, that the malice of his enemies at once attributed the timely but sudden decea.se of his wife, the Lady Katherine, to poison. During the latter years of Mary's reign several needy and ad- venturous politicians, who, under Edward VL, had already risen by self-assertion, knavery, and craft to positions of some influence, secretly offered their services to Elizabeth. Most of them were of low birth and origin. One, Sir William Cecil,^ was the son of a well-to-do Lincolnsliire yeoman, subsequently an inn-holder at Stamford, who, because of his youthful good looks, had been made page to Henry YHL This page's only son, a shrewd, cold, and calculating person, knighted in 155 1, but better known as Lord Purghley, a title which he subsequently received on February 25, 157 1, together with the Order of the Garter, saw e.xactly how the land lay, and discovered, as he imagined, a fair chance of further temporal advancement. Educated at (iray's Inn, he had been sometime private secretary to the Duke of Somerset, and was afterwards made that nobleman's " master ' One writer, the learned ami anonynums author of A'cs/>o/tsio aJ Edicttiin Eliz. Keg., published at Augsbursj in 1592, asserts that Cecil's father held an inferior situation in the oftice of the Royal Wardrobe ; that hi:; grandfather kept an inn at Stamford, and was afterwards one of the Royal (uiards. SIR WILLIAM CECIL. of requests." At that period he masqueraded as a zealous Reformer, was in confidential communication with the Zwinglian heretics, and ostentatiously declared that he thirsted for what they called "the pure milk of the Word," meaning thereby the blasphemous glosses and odious caricatures of Christianity in which these repulsive and dangerous people delighted. In 154S he had held a secretaryship of State. On the timely death of Edward, however, like many others, Cecil at once changed his tactics when Mary became queen. Then, dropping the heretics, and having avoided Lady Jane Grey, he appeared as a devout and zealous Catholic. In the silver and velvet gypcyre at his side he carried, and frequently produced, the "Hours of Our Lady," and muttering his devotions, ostentatiously used his large-beaded rosary. But Mary was not to be taken in or duped. Knowing Cecil's antecedents, she never trusted him. To Eliza- beth, however, he proved to be welcome. For, passing over her natural and proper advisers, the old nobility of blood and good repute, she at once appointed him Lord Treasurer of her House- hold and Chief Minister of State. On the very day of her accession, before she started for London, he had presented to her twelve "Minutes of Subjects," needing, as he asserted, Her (trace's instant consideration ; while, four days afterwards, he was sworn of her Privy Council. He was thus taken into her con- fidence. At once he urged her to put away without delay all those who had occupied places of influence under the late queen, some of whom he feared ; suggesting that their ]jlaces be supplied by "men meaner in substance and younger in years "^ — advice which she certainly took. In order to overawe and compass efficiently the degradation of the Catholic clergy, he suggested that Her Majesty, striking boldly and sharply, should promptly involve them in the disagreeable meshes of a pnemunire ; while, on the other hand, in order to terrify the more rampant and unscrupulous innovators — the communistic Protestants and " Hot Gospellers " — who threatened to become a nuisance and a danger, he recommended the immediate enactment of a sharp law against ])ublic assemblies. Under his advice the kingdom was brought into sore troubles and great straits. Under the plea of serving his royal mistress and benefiting the State, he pursued with art so tortuous a Ijolicy that bribes to secure supporters of it, and acts of cor- ruption and venality were again and again repeated. He care- fully enriched himself, 1 ruined his enemies, and rewarded his ' He contrived to secure for himself the greater part of the endowments of the Abbey of Peterborouj;h. which formed an adequate estate \Nith which to 6 THE CHURCH UNDKR queen ELIZABETH. friends. By his instrumentality true liberty was banished. 'J'here was no fear of God before his eyes; for, more than any other man then Hving, he deHberately sealed the irreligious division between England and the rest of Christendom, and left our distracted nation a prey to every kind of ambitious and crooked-minded adventurer who thought fit to set up as a reformer of religion or a self-appointed concocter of new phases of mischief. In fine, he was one of those keen-sighted worthies, condemned rather than commended by an apostle, who think that gain is godliness.^ Another State official of almost equal influence to that wielded by Cecil was his fellow Secretary of State, Sir Francis Walsingham. J'or art in corrupting others, and skill in elevating treachery to the dignity of a science; for ability in planning and carrying out forgery, as well as in arranging for the assassination of incon- venient allies or open enemies, he was vastly superior to Cecil, as will ere long be discovered ; for while his hypocrisy was consummate, his ability and dexterity were obviously greater, and his general success consequently very considerable. He was of an exceedingly savage nature. It was evidently a pleasure to him, however strange, to inflict personal cruelty upon any supposed enemy who might chance to be in his power. When l)risoners of the old faith, later on, were brought before him in his judicial capacity, or for due and careful examination, he would sometimes kick and cuff them in a passion, or strike them heavily with his staff; while, if they hesitated to convict them- selves, the numerous rude epithets he made use of were frequently disgusting, and his oaths equalled in coarseness, though in repulsiveness rarely surpassed, those which so frequently glided glibly off the compressed and pursed-up lips of his royal mistress. Such tools, tactics, and events served once more and anew to j)oint out to the educated and more thoughtful how true was Plato's expressive saying of old,- that free nations have seldom lost their liberties by concjuest, but chiefly at the hands of low- born and unscrupulous men who have ridden into i)ower upon the tumultuous waves of pojjular ])assion. The queen, being present at the Bishop of Carlisle's mass, support his new dignity of a peer, wliicli later on he received. But lie was not content with these, for, as Dr. I'eter Heylyn wrote — "During the vacancy of the .See of Norwich, and during his (Dr. Scamhler's) incumbency, Sir William Cecil, Principal Secretary of State, possessed himself of the best manors in the Soke, which belonged to it ; and for his (the bishop's^ readi- ness to confirm them to him, he preferred him to the See of Norwich." ' I Tim. vi. 5. - Blato's Rcpid'lic, viii. 562 ; sec. 99. HER OFFICE OF SPIRITUAL HEAD. 7 soon after her accession, — on Christmas morning, as some assert, and while the cantors of her chapel were singing the Gloiia in excelsis at their lectern, — sent a messenger to his lordship within the sanctuary peremptorily forbidding him to elevate the Host.^ Eut Oglethorpe replied that, as it was the unvarying rule of the Catholic Church for all priests to do so, he must ask Her Majesty's permission to allow him to conform. Upon this, before the gospel, and at once, without further parley, she rose from her fald-stool, biting her thin lips in anger, and, motion- ing her attendants to follow, re-clasped her book of devotions, stamped vigorously on the floor, and thus hastily departed. This incident, obviously pre-arranged, was much discussed and commented upon by many. The bishops duly noted it. On the 27th of December, at Cecils instigation, exercising her assumed office of Supreme Spiritual Head of the Church of England, she issued a proclamation througliout both the jirovinces of Canterbury and York, formally and distinctly forbidding any elevation of the Blessed Sacrament by any of her priests. Her chaplain, Minter, saying mass in her presence on the morning of the same day, duly and dutifully observed his sovereign's commands.- In the same proclamation — as a temporary makeshift, until the old and sacred rites brought l)ack under Queen Mary were again abolished by parliamentary authority— the Supreme Governess graciously permitted the Creed, the Lord's Prayer, and the Ten Commandments, as well as the Litany, to be said or sung in the vulgar tongue. At Sandwich, Dover, and Canterbury the Protestant exiles, having realised the new situation, arrived in force and high spirits, and were noisy and triumphant in their bearing. If Jewell may be trusted, the queen was extremely gratified by their return, and expressed her satisfaction.^ Afterwards, how- ever. Her Highness had some reason for somewhat changing ' " Nothing, however, has yet been publicly determined with respect to the abolishing popish superstition, and the re-establiahment of the Christian religion. Ihere is, however, a general expectation that all rites and cere- monies will shortly be reformed by our faithful citizens and other godly men in the afore-mentioned Parliament, either after the pattern which was lately in use in the time of King Edward the .Sixth, or which is set forth by the Protestant princes of Germany in the above-named Confession of Augsburg." — Richard Hilles to Bullinger, dated Februaiy 28, 1559, Zurich Letters, 2nd series, No. 7. - LaJerchiiis, iii. p. 204, and Tierney's edition of Dod's Chiurh History, vol. ii. p. 124. ^ *' We hear that their return was very acceptable to the queen, and that she openly declared her satisfaction."— Letter from John Jewell to Peter Martyr, dated January 26, 1559, Zurich Letters, vol. i. No. 3. 8 THK CHURCH UNDER QUKEX ELIZABETH. lier mind concerning the value of their presence and labours. Some of them, in their enthusiasm at her accession, made a disturbance during mass in the parish church of Dover, hurling a missal ^ during the elevation at the head of the celebrant, whom they termed "a cursed popish dog," "a shaveling," "an antichrist," and an " idol-smacker." - Without authority, the Zwinglian service-book of Edward VI. was again brought into requisition in several places. Legally- instituted clergy were hooted at, spat upon, and persecuted : so that in some places they were unable to minister in public. Several images of our Divine Dord, His Blessed Mother, and the Saints were violently wrenched down from the rood screens and treated with obscene indignities. At Canterbury, as a deliberate act of contempt, a holy-oil stock was emjitied of its sacred contents, in order to grease the creaking wheels of a wainman's cart, which had come in from the adjacent village of Harbledown. At Brentford, at the same time, an indignity too disgusting for words was perpetrated in the font of the parish church by one of the new gospellers, as a practical protest against the religion of Bede, St. Anselm, and Sir Thomas More. The Babel voices of noisy controversialists,'^ young as well as old, everywhere rose anew ; while furious preachers, with screaming voices and deep maledictions for their opponents, went so far in creating serious riots,'* at Oxford, Newark, and Chichester, as that the existing authorities of those places had to step in and keep the peace by armed force, amongst these energetic evangelists of "another gospel which is not another." During Edward's reign, or possibly later, Jonn Knox, the so- ' .Some writers say it was a breviary. But as it was taken off the cushion iin a side altar, it was most probably a missal. -"Ape of antichrist," "mass-monger," "Balaamite," "abbey-lubber," were some of the other choice names given to those who clung to the ancient faith. I have gatheretl both these and those in the text above from the MS. correspondence and Protestant literature of the day. •* " They held arguments also among themselves about the meaning of various Scripture texts, all of them, men and women, girls and boys, labourers, workmen, and simpletons ; and these discussions were often wont, as it was said, to produce quarrels and fights." — Life of IVil/iam ll'istoit," p. 241. London, 1875. * "On the other (the Protestant) side many were raised to great prefer- ments, who, having spent their time of exile in such foreign Churches as followed the platform of Geneva, returned so disaffected to episcopal government with the rites and ceremonies here by law established, as not long after filled the Church with most sad disorders ; not only to the breaking of the bond of peace, but to the grieving and extinguishing the spirit of unity." — T/ie History of Queen Elizabeth, by Peter Heylyn, p. 115. J-ondon, 1671. JOHN KNOX ON QUEEN MARY TUDOR. 9 called "Reformer," had written a treatise ^ in his vigorous but coarse and illogical style, indirectly aimed at Mary Tudor, directly at Mary Stuart, maintaining that the rule of a woman was "repugnant to nature, a contumely to God, a thing most contrarious to His revealed will and approved ordinances, and finally the subversion of all equity and justice." Elizabeth, of course, knew of this treatise, which is a wonderful production for its sanctimonious language, but did not at all appreciate either its logic or rhetoric. John Knox, when brought into communication with her, overcame the difficulty not by giving up his principle, but by boldly maintaining that the queen was a remarkable and obvious exception to the general rule. Her whole life, he pointed out in writing, had been so blessed and favoured by God Almighty, she was so overflowing with grace, she had been so evidently elected by Him, and specially pre- served for His chosen people, that what was unlawful and unnatural in all other women was perfectly lawful and even desirable in her. This appeared to satisfy her temporarily, though it is more than prolDable, as Sir William Throckmorton pointed out, that the political services of Knox were still required, and therefore that his printed insults should be overlooked : — "Considering what Knockes is hable to doo in Scotlande, which is verie muche, all this turmoil there being stirred up as it is, it shuld stande your Majestic instead (if) his former faultes were forgotten." Before determining the exact day for her coronation, the queen sent her favourite, Robert Dudley, to consult the well- known and notorious necromancer and astrologer. Dr. Dee,'^ to ^ A First Blaste of the Trmnpett against llie Mojistroits Kegmen of ivomcii, by John Knox. ^ Vide Godwin's Life of Dr. Dee, in loco. This also is clear from the actual entries in Dr. Dee's Diary and writings, from which the following is taken : — " Her Majestie refused to come in ; but willed to fetch my glass so famous, and to show her some of the properties of it, which I did : her Majestie being taken down from her horse by the Earle of Leicester, Master of the Horse, at the church wall of Mortlake, did see some of the properties of that glas-e, to Her Majestie's great contentment and delight." — Dr. Dee's Co)npe7idioits Memorial, p. 516. When Lord Leicester and Lord Laskey dined with Dee (a.D. 1583), he was not sufficiently well off to provide a suitable repast, so the queen, who was at Sion House, hearing of it, sent him "forty angels of gold." Li 1592 Mr. Thomas George brought him "an hundred marks from Her Majestie." " 1577. Nov. 22nd, I rod to Windsor to the Q. Majestie. Nov. 25th, I spake with the Queue liora qidnta. Nov. 28th, I spake with the Quene iiora qiiinta. I spake with Mr. Secretary Walsingham " (Ashmole asserts that this person was one of Dee's greatest patrons). . . , "1578. Oct. 8th, the Quene's Majesty had conference with meat Richemond inter g et 11. . . . 1580. The Quene's Majestie, to my lO THK CHURCH UNDKR QUEKN ELIZAHKTir. whom Her Majesty, havinL,^ privately renounced the sacrament of penance and its competent ministers, often went for advice, and with whom she held close conversations, — a notable case of degeneracy ; proving that, when the Christian faith in its integrity is mutilated by choice or cast aside, gross superstition often takes its place. Dr. Dee then dwelt at a small house, close to the water side and no great distance from the parish church of Mortlake.^ On her personal application, through Dudley, Dr. Dee informed her that Sunday, the 15th of January, was un- doubtedly a lucky day ; and so, with the sanction of her Council, the ceremony was appointed to be then performed. On Thursday, the 12th, Her Majesty consequently proceeded from Westminster to the Tower preparatory to the grand and customary "procession of recognition." On the 14th of January, leaving the Tower about two o'clock in the afternoon, the queen passed through the city back to Westminster, according to ancient precedent. Her coach, covered with crimson velvet, and richly caparisoned horses, was surrounded by a well-ordered cavalcade of State officers and attendants, all magnificently attired. Eight knights bore a broad canopy of cloth of gold over her. She was almost every- where greeted with acclamations by the curious and interested crowds which thronged Cheapside and Fleet Street, or ranged themselves in front of the mansions of the nobility in the Strand. IJefore she started, her ladies-in-waiting heard her piously and complacently compare herself to Daniel delivered from the den of lions, and thank Cxod out loud for His providential care of her.2 The rich decorations in Fenchurch and Gracechurch Streets were continuous. Triumphal arches w^ith complimentary alle- gorical representations, which were supposed to be explained by the recitation of wordy verses, were the scenes of much applause from dense crowds. In Cheapside, a stage had been erected and adorned, where eight little children personified the Beati- tudes, and expressed a hope, in rugged but honest verse, that God would make the queen strong and bestow upon her His blessing. This part of the city was decorated with sumjjtuousness and taste. Here the rich mercers dwelt in quaint and picturescjue great comfort [horn qninla), came with her trayn from the court, and at my (lore graciously callmg me to her on horseback." — Dr. John Dees Diary. Camden Society. London, 1842. ' MSS. Ashmol. No. 17S8. fol. 149. * Holinbhed's C/iro nicks, vol. ii. p. 17S7, etc. HER FORMAL CORONATION. II gabled houses, one storey overhanging another ; all the walls and windows of which were tastefully adorned with carpets, costly hangings, streamers, banners, and tapestries; and from which crowds in holiday attire looked down with smiles and greetings upon the moving pageant. Here, too, the city authorities, who had been efficiently stirred up to do their duty by Cecil, had gathered in their picturesque and effective official dresses — before vulgarity was rampant and good taste had quite decayed — headed by the Recorder, Sir Ranulph Cholmely, who, in the name of the Lord Mayor and citizens, offered Her Majesty as their gift a crimson satin purse containing a thousand marks in gold. This was graciously accepted, and Elizabeth then promised to be a good queen to all her people — a promise that was certainly not kept for any length of time. A halt was made, by previous appointment, at a triumphal arch near St. Paul's, where in the cold January air a female child, 'half-draped, in accordance with the revived paganism of that day, and let down by silken cords from above, came forward with rehearsed grimaces and exaggerated genuflections to present Her Majesty with a large early cojjy of the mistranslated Geneva Bible with its wordy preface and Calvinistic notes. This questionable present she graciously received with bows and other acknowledgments ; and then, ostentatiously ])lacing it to her heart, acknowledged, with condescending smiles, the boisterous applause of Cecil's creatures — placed there to close this impressive incident in a prearranged drama. As the procession took its way along the Strand westwards, the Tower guns were heard booming in the distance. Darkness soon overspread the city, and the stars came out. Her Majesty rested that night in the palace at Whitehall, and prepared herself for the solemnities of the morrow. The queen, as will be seen, was crowned at Westminster by Oglethorpe, Bishop of Carlisle. It seems more than probable that up to the latest hours of the previous Saturday evening, though several prelates had been tampered with and tested, no bishop 1 could be thoroughly relied upon to perform the act; for, early on Sunday morning, it became necessary to hastily borrow from Bonner, the Bishop of London, suitable episcopal vestments for the officiating ])relate. This necessary part of the solemnity, therefore, could hardly have been finally arranged 1 In an existing record of the coronation in the Ashmolean MSS. now in the Bodleian Library at Oxford, other bishops are mentioned as being present. If so, these were no doubt those guihy of treasonable acts and heresy, who had gone abroad in Mary's reijn, and had now hastily returned. 12 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. until the small hours of the night. Oglethorpe, after great ])ersuasion, had consented ; but he stood alone, and very soon repented him of his act and deed. In the Abbey there remained, as there still remains, an old literary treasure, the Liber Regalis^ possibly used at the coronation of Richard II. and his cjueen, containing Ordo cotisccrandi /eginafn solain^ which, after it had been inspected by Sir William Cecil, — five of whose MS. notes may still be read on its thick vellum folios — was by him approved and made use of by Oglethorpe in the ceremony.^ This book, the copy of an office of the fourteenth century, with special rubrics applicable to the coronation of kings and queens in the Benedictine Abbey of Westminster, was no doubt prepared for the actual use of the officiating prelate on such occasions. The Abbey Church, where most the Catholic ornamenta re- mained, had been arranged for the ceremony in accordance with recognised tradition ; though, on account of the exhausted state of the Treasury, the ceremonial was shorn of some of its ancient splendour. Early in the morning the queen came in the royal barge from Whitehall to Westminster, where the populace, and specially the Protestant and Reforming part of it, had gathered to greet her with acclamations and applause. She was met in Westminster Hall by the Bishop of Carlisle, vested in cope and mitre, and bearing a pastoral staff; while other inferior clergy, in surplices and copes, were in attendance. But none of the diocesan bishops, who were in canonical and lawful possession of their Sees, were present. One and all, save Oglethorpe, deliberately and intentionally stayed away. The choristers and clerks of the Royal Chapel, in scarlet cassocks and lawn rochets, were there to do their part, and a large cross of silver-gilt was carried at the head of the procession. All the high officers of State were in attendance, while a canopy of cloth of gold was borne over the queen as she walked with state and dignity from Westminster Hall to the Abbey, along an appointed pathway railed in and spread with blue cloth powdered with conventional roses. Within the Abbey, which was crowded, some of the Benedic- tine monks looking down upon the gay scene from the southern triforium of the choir, as Father Seigebert Bulkeley mentioned, all the detailed rites of the Liber Begalis were duly observed — the Recognition, the Proclamation, the customary Offerings, the 1 " Liber Regalis, sen Ordo consecrandi Regem solum : Oido consecrandi reginam cum Rege : Ordo consecrandi rcginam solam. Rubrica de Regiis exequiis, e codice West-monasteriensi Editus." — Printed for the Roxburgh Club (at the cost of Fredeiici<, Earl Beauchamp). London, 1870. THE OATH AND ANOINTING. I 3 Oalli, and the Unction. ^ Every step was duly taken in accord- ance with precedent, as Cecil had enjoined should be the case, and nothing essential or important seems to have been omitted. The Oath, the Unction, and the actual rite of Consecration were, of course, details in the sacred service of the most essential and important public character — ^and were seen and acknow- ledged so to be, as well by those who favoured the old, as by those who were secretly promoting the advance of the new, religion. On this occasion, by the advice of Cecil and her new coun- cillors, and in order to secure to herself the crown without danger of subsequent question or dispute, the queen had been carefully advised to dissemble falsely, in God's own house and presence, to swear and forswear, to appear to be what she certainly was not, and to seem to believe in that which she had privately resolved to set aside. Within a few feet of the shrine and sacred relics of St. Edward, our saintly confessor, she openly took the usual solemn and sacred oath of Christian kings," when it was tendered her, kissing thereupon the precious text of the Holy Gospels, and, in sight of peers and people, promising thereby to defend the Catholic religion, and to guard faithfully the rights and immunities of God's Holy Church, as all the previous monarchs from the days of St. Edward had each done. The bystanding peers heard her repeat the solemn words, and saw her do the appointed acts. Any honest " Reformers," so called — and some were certainly present — must surely have been ashamed of the oath she then took, for they well enough knew that she had no intention of keeping it, though not one of them is known to have publicly protested against such an immoral method. At the appointed time Elizabeth withdrew with her ladies-in- waiting to be prepared for the act of anointing. This was done on forehead, breast, and hands, as usual ; though the queen ^ " In Nomine Patris," etc. " Prosit tibi ha?c unctio olei in honorem et confirmationem ceternam in scecula sivcuiorum. Amen." — Liher Kegalis, in loco. - Miss Strickland thus attempts to defend this act : — " It is our duty to our subject to suggest, as her defence from the horrid appearance of wilful perjury, that it is possible she meant at that time to model the Reformed Church she projected, and for which she challenged the appellati(jn of Catholic, as near as possible to the Anglo-Saxon Q\mxq}sx." —Lives of the Queens of England, vol. vi. p. 164. London, 1884. Upon which defence the only remark that need be made is, that, as far as ordinary research has enlightened us, perjury is not known to have been an authorised practice of the Anglo-Saxon Church. 14 T[IE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. does not appear to have much Hked the ceremony, for, on retiring again for a few moments afterwards, she, with unpardon- able levity, observed to one of her personal attendants that the oil was stinking,^ and that she had " much misHked the greasing." When she returned to the space before the high altar, she was found arrayed in a mantle of cloth of gold and ermine : she was then ceremonially girt with a sword, endued with the arinillinn and solemnly crowned. The coronation ring was put on the accustomed finger : - in her right hand was placed the sceptre, in her left the orb. After this the officiating prelate first did homage, followed in order by the peers, ^ and then solemn high mass was continued. All the ancient rites of the Salisbury missal were scrupulously observed, save that the Epistle and Gospel were sung in English as well as in Latin, and there was no elevation of the Sacred Host.'* At the offertory the three State swords were offered, with other customary oblations. Her Majesty, kneeling at her fald-stool, communicated under one kind, received the pax with apparent devotion \ and so, in due course, the sacrifice was ended, and the coronation service completed. It had long been a custom for English monarchs on the occasion of their coronation to release certain prisoners. Elizabeth, on the morning afterwards, making no exception to the rule, did the same, in the presence of her Court. At the close of the proceedings, one of the courtiers, who had duly rehearsed the farce beforehand, came forward, with the accus- tomed genuflections and bows, and in a loud voice, but keeping his countenance effectually, implored the queen that four or five more prisoners might be graciously released. Her Majesty inquired their names. ' " She was also anointed, but she disliked the ceremony and ridiculed it ; for when she withdrew, accordinsj to the custom, to put on the royal gar- ments, it is reported that she said to the noble ladies in attendance upon her, 'Away with you, the oil is stinking.'" — Edward Rishton's Conliniiaiion of Sanders History, edited by David Lewis, M.A., p. 243. London, 1S77. Good Ne7vs from London, pp. 65, 66. Printed at the Sign of the Swan. London, 1675. - Vide diber Kegalis, pp. 33-35. Ed. London, 1S70. •* Miss .Strickland, in her f.ife of Queen Elizabeth (vol. vi. p. 168), remarks that the issue of the Bull of Pope P.aul IV., dated 12th January 1558-9, " declaring heretical sovereigns incapable of reigning . . . did not deprive her of the allegiance of her Catholic peers, all of whom paiil their liege homage to her," failed to note ihat as the coronation took place only three days after the time of its promulgation, the Bull could not possibly have reached England or become known to the peers in question. ■* Opinions and accounts differ on this point, though testimony for the statement in the text predominates. NEW PEERS ELECTED. I 5 " Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, the four Evangelists, and the Apostle Paul," was the immediate retort. "These men, most dread sovereign, have been, as it were, so closely shut up in the prison of an unknown tongue, that until released they cannot converse with the Lord's people." As Bacon has recorded, the queen answeredgravely : "It is first best to inquire of them whether they themselves approve of being released or not." This incident was spoken of in public and commented on by the preachers from the Continent. On the 13th January 1558-1559, five new peers were created, viz. William Parr, a Lancashire nobleman, restored to his title of Marquis of Northampton ; Edward Seymour, made Earl of Hertford ; Thomas Howard, son of the late Duke of Norfolk, made Viscount Howard of Bindon, in Dorsetshire ; Sir Oliver St. John, made Lord St. John of Bletsoe ; and the Lady Mary Boleyn's son. Sir Henry Carey, created Baron Hunsdon. All these belonged to the innovating, or, as some term it, the " Reforming " party. The Court, under Cecil's advice, resolved at the same time to influence the elections to the House of Commons ; so five candidates were previously named for each of the counties and three for each of the boroughs, from amongst whom the members were chosen. Ten days after the coronation the Houses of Parliament met. The first act taken by the Commons was to vote and present a " humble but earnest Address to the Queen, that she would vouchsafe to accept some match capable of supplying heirs to Her Majesty's royal virtues and dominions." The queen, who evidently did not like interference on this subject, told the Speaker and other members that she might long ago have married if she had so willed, but that for herself she should be heartily content to have it inscribed on her tomb after death that she had lived and died a virgin queen. She added, for their future guidance, amongst some involved sentences of studied ambiguity, that it was obviously neither their duty to prescribe to nor to bind her, but to petition, if they so willed, and then humbly to obey. Other important work was at once taken in hand. Thus : — - Queen JNLary, King Henry's lawful daughter by his queen the Lady Katherine, and Elizabeth, the illegitimate daughter of the King by Anne Boleyn, had both been expressly declared illegiti- mate by statute under Henry VHL^ When Mary succeeded to the throne, however, an Act had been at once passed- declaring ^ 28 Henry VIII. c. 7. '^ i Mary, Session ii. c. i. l6 TIIK CHURCH UNDER QUEEX ELIZABETH. that she had been born "in a most just and lawful matrimony," and thus the unstained honour of her mother was dutifully and properly vindicated. Elizabeth at the present time, who, of course, stood on another platform, acted in quite a different manner ; possibly under the influence of her advisers, who saw the complex and complicated difficulties before them, and who in the new Act passed were conseijuently vague and ambiguous in the language they selected. This Act at once claimed for Elizabeth regular and due royal descent, and at the same time conferred upon her the right to reign by the authority of Parliament ; two features obviously inconsistent and self- destructive. In due course, after some discussion, but at no long interval after assembling, the two Houses passed some most momentous laws, the full force and importance of which upon the National Church are even now scarcely realised. By these new laws what was not over-exactly termed the "ancient jurisdiction of the Crown over the estate ecclesiastical and spiritual " was said to be " restored," while all " foreign jurisdiction repugnant to the same" abolished. By this Act, the general repeal under Queen Mary of the "reforming" statutes of Henry VHI. and Edward VI. was directly abrogated : all spiritual and ecclesiastical jurisdiction of every sort and kind, without any exception, being thus vested in the Crown, though now worn by a woman, in virtue of which enactment special Royal Commissions, composed of clerks and laymen, were at once appointed, their powers from time to time being renewed and extended ; while the "Court of High Commission," as it was termed, was subsecjuently established on the same parliamentary authority in 1583. P'urthermore, and at once, all ministers and officers whatsoever, whether temporal or spiritual, whether bisho])s or judges, canons or magistrates, parish clerks or pikcmen, were bound to take an oath acknowledging the queen to be " the only supreme governor of the realm as well in spiritual or ecclesiastical things or causes as temporal ";^ and renouncing "all foreign jurisdictions, powers, ^ That this tradition, now all but exploded, has come down to the present time is abundantly evident from the followintj Protest of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster, read, prior to the consecration of the Bishop of Durham (a. I). 1879), ^Y the Dean in the Jerusalem Chamber: — " I, the Very Reverend Arlliur Penrhyn Stanley, Doctor in Divinity, Dean of the collegiate church of St. Peter, Westminster, iin mediately subject to the Queen s Majesty and no other, do hereby, on behalf of the Dean and Chapter of the said church, declare and protest that by compliance with licence of the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury to the Lord Archbishop of York to conse- feckenham's defence of the faith. 17 superiorities, or authorities," under pain of forfeiture of present office, and disability to hold any other. It was further enjoined that the oath in question should be formally and duly tendered to every such person throughout the realm within thirty days of the prorogation of Parliament at the end of its session.^ All persons about to take orders, or to receive degrees in the universities ; all clergymen about to be promoted to any spiritual livings, or already in possession of benefices; as well as all laymen in office, such as judges, magistrates, or persons receiving wages of the Crown, or suing out livery of their lands, were to take the oath. It was specially enacted, moreover, as a leading and crucial principle, that the authority needful for the visitation of all spiritual persons, and the correction of errors, heresies, and abuses, should be annexed to the Crown ; and that the power of exercising this authority by delegates to be appointed by Letters Patent under the Great Seal should remain with the queen and her successors for ever. Against this revolutionary and ridiculous act John Feckenham, Abbot of Westminster, made a powerfully-argumentative and even brilliant speech in the House of Lords, in which he thus dwelt on the deeds of disorder, disobedience, and destruction then being perpetrated : — " In her late Majesty's reign, your lordships may remember how quiet and governable the people were. It was not then their custom to prescribe to authority, to run before the laws, nor disobey the proclamations of their sovereign. There was then no sacrilegious rapine, no plundering of churches, no blasphemous outrage and trampling the holy sacraments under their feet. It was none of their way to tear down the pix, and hang up the knave of clubs in its place. They did not hack and crate the Rev. Joseph Barber Lightfoot, Doctor in Divinity, to be Bishop and Pastor of the catliedral church of Durham, we do not intend to acknow- ledge any jurisdiction or authority of the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury over us, the said Dean and Chapter, or over our said collegiate church ; but do claim and assert that we are irnmcdiately subject to the Queen's Majesty and no other ecclesiastical authority whatsoever ; and that we have granted the use of our said collegiate church to the Lord Archbishop of York for the said consecration, in pursuance of the mandate of Her iNLijesty the Queen, dated at Westminster the 29th day of March last, in the forty-second year of Her Majesty's reign. " Dated the 25th day of April 1879. "(Signed) Arthur Fenrhyn Stanley." ^ In this enactment Temporal Peers- were excepted by a special clause : just as in recent times the English bishops succeeded in getting the Public Worship Regulation Act passed for the clergy generally, while they duly and carefully secured themselves from either or any of its operations. B , 1 8 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. hew the crucifix in those times. They were better observers of discipUne than to eat flesh openly, and fill their shambles with butchers' meat in the holy solemnity of Lent. In the late reign the generality of the people, and particularly the nobility and those of the Privy Council, were exemplary for their public devotion ; it being the custom to go to a church or chapel, to beg the protection of God, before they entered upon the business of the day. But now the face of things is quite otherwise." ^ This supremacy in things spiritual, as the whole tenor of the new Act most clearly shows, was not held to be inherent in the Crown, — such an idea would have been absurd, — but was regarded as a special grant,- expressly made by the power and authority of Parliament. Here, then, was a portentous and complete revolution. Those, therefore, who should be found to maintain, "by express words, deed, or act," the authority of any foreign prince or prelate, were, by this new enactment, to forfeit their goods : or if these did not amount to the value of ^20, such persons were, for the first offence, to be put into prison for twelve months ; to incur the penalties of pneintinin for the second ; and to be regarded as guilty of high treason, and to be put to death as traitors — i.e. drawn, hung, dismembered, disembowelled, beheaded, and quartered — for the third offence. This Act, be it noted, directly revived all the most obnoxious and atrocious of the enactments of Henry VHI. and Edward VI., as has been already pointed out. The substitution, however, of the term "Supreme Governor"^ for "Supreme Head" of the English Establishment ■* was a mere distinction without a differ- ence, as subsequent events too truly proved. ^ Abbot Feckenham's speech against the Act of Uniformity. — Bid. Cot(. Vcsp. D., xviii. fol. 8, ef seq. - No person nor assembly of persons can give or grant that which he him- self or such assembly does not possess nor own. 80 was it in the case of Elizabeth's Parliament. ■' Calvin, in his Commentary on the Book of Amos (ch. vii. v. 13'), had written thus : — " Erant enim blasphemi qui vocarent eum (Henricum VHI.) Summum Caput Ecclesia^ sub Christo" ; so those Protestant theologians who valued this heresiarch's opinions had the craft and wisdom to change the term witliout changing the thing. ■* No special provision was made in case the monarch became a Brownist, a Lutheran, or Presbyterian, an omission which might have caused difficulties in recent times had not the "supremacy of public opinion" been gradually allowed to take the place of the Tudor supremacy, which, as all except the modern Erastians admit, has long lost both its moral and political value and importance. Originally introduced by the application of the rack, the halter, and irons, it is now bereft of its power, and has completely collapsed. Tlie "supremacy of public opinion," however, as administered and enforced in OTHER DEFENDERS OF THE OLD FAITH. 19 It must not be supposed that such a revolution was brought about without both expostulation and protest on the part of some. The whole of the Episcopate to a man voted against the third reading ; while two bishops, on behalf of their brethren in spiritual authority, made efficient speeches against it. These were Archbishop Heath of York, and Bishop Scott of Chester. The archbishop most forcibly pointed out that, as the queen's sovereignty descended by hereditary right, the grant of such special supremacy in spiritual matters was quite beyond the power of Parliament to bestow, and altogether so great a novelty, and unprecedented, as to be both dangerous and wrong. His (kace further maintained that all women, of what sort soever they might be, were entirely unqualified for spiritual functions. They could neither preach nor administer the Sacraments nor exercise spiritual censures — acts which belonged exclusively to the clergy and the hierarchy. Bishop Scott of Chester then argued that without a chief pastor the visible Church would be weakened. Such a guide was practically necessary for receiving appeals from, and deter- mining controversies within, the boundaries of all local or national churches. Taking notice that the Pope's authority had been disclaimed by an English provincial council, he announced that the resolutions of such an assembly were of no force whatso- ever against the decrees of the Universal Church. ^ England, he ]iaiiiamentary law courts, has efllciently taken its place, and, of course, will remain in power in the State Establishment so long as it is the will of the majority of the electors that a State Establishment shall be maintained. ' As a recent author has so forcibly and ably written : — " When England embraced the Christian faith, she became a part of Christ's spiritual kingdom or empire. She did not become the whole of that kingdom. It was an absolute impossibility for her to do so. Until, therefore, one part of anything can be equal to the thing itself, so long is it impossible that a part of Christ's kingdom can lie His whole kingdom. In other words, England is not an empire, speaking spiritually. And if England is not a spiritual empire, but one mere province of a spiritual empire, then appeals cannot have their final determination without the assent and consent of the other provinces of the universal kingdom. If such a thing were possible, then might one province claim to decide a spiritual question in one way, and another province in another way. Thus direct conflict would arise. There would be instead of one spiritual kingdom or empire of Christ, as many spiritual kingdoms as there are Christian nations in the world, all absolutely independent one of anoiher, and every one possibly divided against every other, and fighting against every other. And thus the Catholic Church would have long since been brought to desolation, and have had an end. This was not the way, beloved, that the Divine Wisdom built His house, and hewed out His seven mystic pillars. It is the Statute of Appeals, and the assertion that England is, spiritually speaking, an empire, and that the Church of England as a part is equal to the whole ; and that this part of the one kingdom of Christ 20 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. maintained, was only one part of Christ's universal kingdom ; and, furthermore, that no man nor body of men can bestow that which they themselves do not already possess. These speeches were carefully heard and warmly applauded. About this period a document of " Questions and Advices," drawn up, no doubt, by Sir Thomas Smith, one of King Edward's advisers, was submitted to Cecil, as a guide in the work of so- called " Reformation." A new Service-Book was at once needed, so the queen by Letters Patent appointed Drs. Bill, Parker, Cocks, and May, together with Mr. Grindal, Mr. Whitehead, and Mr. Pilkington, to prepare it. The lawful bishops of the Church of England were in this work wholly ignored in favour of men owning no spiritual authority whatsoever, and deeply tainted, moreover, with dangerous heresies. Cecil, desiring moderation and comprehensiveness, gave these persons very express orders both what to do and what to avoid. ^ The Lord Keeper Bacon, in his speech at the opening of Parliament, pointed out that " nothing should be advised or done which anyway in continu- ance of time was likely to breed or nourish any kind of idolatry or superstition." In these particulars, his lordship's timely and valuable advice was certainly not ignored. With a few trifling alterations, what is known as the " Second Prayer-Book of Edward VL"'^ was now, by the Act of Uniformity, restored to use, having been thus recommended. That devotional volume was the baldest and barest that could have been compiled. Its scrappy service for the Holy Communion, into which the Ten Commandments had been introduced,^ for the sake of the second is competent to decide spiritual questions apart from the other provinces of Christ's kingdom, and independently of them ; in other words, without the consent of the rest of Christendom, which is in direct and irreconcilable antagonism to the revealed word of God, and a bold and daring contradiction to the express will of the Incarnate Son of God." — The Keys of the R'iiigi/oin of Heaven, by the Rev. Dr. T. W. Mossman, O.C.R., p. 8. London, 1S79. ^ A frightful passage from the Litany, which harmonised well enough with the maniacal notion of most of the " Reformers," that the Bishop of the See of St. Peter is "///i? antichrist " — " From the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome and all his detestable enormities " — was, at Cecil's suggestion, but after con- siderable opposition, omitted. -On July 19, 1559, a Commission was issued by the queen, constituting Parker, Archbishop-elect of Canterbury, Grindal, Bishop-elect of London, and others, Commissioners for carrying into execution the Acts for the uniformity of Common Prayer, and for restoring to the Crown the ancient jurisdiction of the State ecclesiastical. — Domestic Papers, Elizabeth, vol. v. No. 18. ^ A long and wearisome dissertation by Pollanus, delivered at Strasburg, pointing out how the Second Commandment forbids the worship of the Host, and how desirable it is that this "law of God" should be kept before the MUTILATION OF ANCIENT SERVICES. 21 (believed by the narrow-minded fanatics who had first compiled the new production to be a protest against what has been in recent times called Eucharistic Adoration i), was supposed to have been founded on an English version of the Sarum Mass ; hacked about and mutilated, however, in every portion. All the old introits, many of the proper prefaces, all the secret prayers, and collects after Communion, were abolished by a few rude strokes of the pen. Those sacred parts of the ancient Canon not cast aside as idolatrous, or rejected because the venerated saints of Christendom were thereby had in memory, were mis- translated, detached from their contexts, broken up, interpolated with novel phrases of ambiguous meaning, separated either from other ; and without an ancient parallel formed into a new service which remains as a monument of the deliberate craft, skilful double-dealing,- and heretical tendencies of those who com- piled it. At what is known as the " Consecration Prayer," no directions whatsoever were given to the presiding minister for blessing the bread and wine, or for touching either of those elements while the prayer was being said — a crucial omission. For church ministers to have done so from the time of Elizabeth to the period of revision under Charles II. would have been to have broken the statute law of the land. It is open to question, therefore, if, notwithstanding the profound special pleading of eyes of the populace, was no doubt the origin of the introduction of the Ten Commandments both into the Liturgy and on to the east wall of our English churches. 1 The doctrine of the Reformers concerning what they called " the Lord's Supper," was truly and faithfully taught by the late Rev. John Keble, in his well-known unrevised verse in The Christian Year: — " O come to our Communion Feast: There present in the heart. Not in the hands, th' eternal Priest Will His true self impart." "The minister gives what is in his power, namely, the bread and wine, and not the Body of Christ ; nor is it exhibited by the minister and eaten by the communicant, otherwise than in the word preached, read, or meditated upon. And to eat the Body of Christ is nothing more than to believe, as He Himself teaches in the sixth (chapter) of John." — Letter of Hooper to Bucer, Original Letters, p. 47. Parker Society's Works. - The saying that " the Church of England owns an Arminian Prayer-Book and Calvinistic Articles," though perhaps strictly inexact, is a testimony to the intentional vagueness and studied ambiguity of those formularies. At the present day, none of her authorities can declare what she teaches even with regard to Baptism. All "views" (as they are called) are tolerated, from the doctrine of Catholics to the heresy of Calvinists. Anything and everything is allowed, little is forbidden, but nothing definite or precise is authoritatively and universally taught. 22 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. several modern writers in its favour, such a form for celebrating the Holy Eucharist in use for exactly a hundred years, could have been valid. If there be intentionally no act of blessing, of course no benediction is given. If there be no express deed of consecration (as both theology and common sense declare), no consecration is by consequence effected. The well-known " rule of contraries " was duly applied by those who made these changes. For example, in the mass there was always an altar of stone used : in the new Service of the Supper, a table of wood. At the former, the priest was enjoined to stand before the altar; at the latter, by way of contrast, the minister was directed to go to the north end of the table. In the mass the priest invariably began the service on the Epistle side, and the Gloria in excelsis was said or sung at its commencement ; iii the Supper the minister began on the Gospel side, while in this new service the Gloria in excelsis was placed at its close. Moreover, the mixed chalice, the invocation of the Holy Ghost, and the sign of the cross were all omitted. At the delivery of the bread and wine, instead of the old form, the offensive words " Take and eat this in remembrance that Christ died for thee," etc.,^ were substituted. A table consisting of a pair of rude trestles and a horizontal wooden board,- now ^ In the mass, as the words spoken on giving communion indicated, the Body and Blood of Christ were bestowed ; whereas, in the Supper, the minister distributed "bread and wine " to a seated congregation in remem- brance of our Saviour's death upon Calvary. No greater contrast, than that so manifest between the new and the old, could be conceived. As Jewell, a bishop and an authority, thus wrote : — " Spiritually and with the mouth of our faith we eat the Body of Christ and drink His Blood. . . . The bread that we receive with our bodily mouths is an eartlily thing, and therefore a figure, as the water in baptism is likewise a fignxQ.'' —John Jcii'ell, Bishop of Sanini, in Controversy unth Harditi^, p. 448. And Bishop Grindal — "Whoso will be relieved by the Body of Christ must receive Him as He will be received, with the instrument of faith appointed thereunto, not with his teeth or mouth." — Grindal's A'ciiiains, p. 46. ^ "Twain trestlys and a boord of joyner's work for the Supper." — Church- wardens' Accounts, A. D. 1559, for St. Mary's, Ipswich. "/Av« (paid) to John ye carpenter for ye mackyng of treystles for ye Communyon, iijs. 4d." — Churchwardens' Book, Thame, Oxon, a.d. 1560. Mr. J. H. Parker, C.B. (a.d. 1S79) thus kindly w^ritcs to me : — "Some thirty years ago a friend of mine, who was a brother atchicologist, published a pamphlet to explain that all the Communion Tables of the time of Elizabeth and James I. had the table itself — that is, the wooden slab, talntla, or board — detached from the framework, on which it is placed, but many of them still remained uniletached. He printed a list of these, and I verified many of them. Others had been attached to the framework in quite recent times with modern iron screws. In some cases, instead of a framework, tressels were used, and this, I believe, is still the case in the Isle of Jersey, at least when I was there. The table, or wooden slab, was brought out of the OMISSIONS IN THE ANCIENT RITES. 23 occupied the place of the ancient consecrated stone altar. Sometimes it was placed in the middle of the choir, and occa- sionally in the nave. Cross and candlesticks were swept away. Instead of the old "massing cups," the "chalices of antichrist," " cups of the sorceress," as they were profanely called, — most of which had disappeared,^ having been too affectionately grasped and retained by the Edwardian " Reformers " and their energetic agents, — newly-made domestic and secular-looking vessels for the Communion Table, of quite a different shape, with covers, seem to have been almost universally adopted. Thus a Supper of bread and wine, given once a quarter at mid-day, in remembrance of an act done long ago, Christ's death, was once again inten- tionally substituted for the adorable sacrifice of the Christian dispensation, enjoined by our Divine Master to be offered con- tinually — a sacrifice true, proper, and propitiatory, as well for the departed as for the living. Furthermore in our Baptismal Service the exorcisms, the unction, the trine immersion, and the putting on of the chrisom- cloth were all omitted. The Service for Confirmation - was so altered and disfigured, both in its form and matter (for here like- wise the use of unction and the sign of the cross were dropped), that many doubt whether it can be valid ; it being thus reduced to a mere episcopal or paternal blessing which might be again and again repeated without any danger of sacrilege. In the Service for the Visitation of the Sick, all mention of the Sacra- ment of Extreme Unction was cast out, and reservation of the Holy Eucharist omitted. In the Burial of the Dead, all the touching and beautiful prayers for the departed were dropped, while the Eucharist at funerals was disallowed. Neither alb, vest- ment, nor cope was henceforth to be used ; but only a surplice for a priest or deacon, and a rochet for a bishop. The solemn and expressive services for Holy Week ; the various episcopal rites peculiar to Maundy Thursday and Easter chancel and placed in the nave on tressels by the side of the reading-desk for the Communion Service. I was told this was always the case in that island." ^ It seems very doubtful if so many as twenty old English chalices and patens remain throughout the whole of the two provinces. I know of old examples at Trinity and Corpus Christi Colleges, Oxford ; Wymondham, Norfolk ; Nettlecombe and Pilton, Somersetshire ; Brancaster, Norfolk ; M'^est Drayton, Middlesex ; St. Sampson's, Guernsey ; Great Waltham, Essex ; Combe Pyne, Devonshire ; Cliffe, Kent ; Walmer, Kent ; Leo- minster, Herefordshire ; Shernbourne, Norfolk ; and a few in private keeping. The Rev. E. J. Phipps owned a good specimen. - See a short, but learned and vigorous, article on this subject — " Con- firmation in the Church of England" — on p. 271 et seq. of The Reiinicn Magazine, vol. i. London : Nutt, 1879. 24 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. Even ; the special hallowing and beneficent solemnities of Good Friday ; as, for example, the consecration of the holy oils, the service of the Pra^-sanctified, the creeping to the cross, the benediction of new fire, of the Paschal taper and of the font, — ancient and hallowed rites which so efficiently taught people through the eye, — were all swept away. So that, in our own day, as a consequence of such changes, the Christian feasts having, many of them, been long disused, Parliament has thought it desirable and necessary to appoint four secular days of recrea- tion ; while Good Friday, the death-day of the world's Redeemer, has been practically made a festival ; and Ascension Day, a feast of obligation, has been almost entirely forgotten.^ The magnificent and appropriate services common to days on which prelates, martyrs, confessors, virgins, and holy women had been for centuries commemorated were totally and completely abolished. Portuaries, manuals, missals of the various national rites, books of the hours of our Lady, the offices for the dead, i:)ontificals, ceremonials, antiphonals and jewelled books of the (lospels, were each and all utterly cast out and burnt — save, of course, the acceptable gold and jewels which adorned them. Severe punishment followed even the possession of such volumes. A restless desire for change, combined with a repulsive fanaticism, thus led those who in the struggle had now secured the whip- handle of usurped power, to destroy and sweep away whatever seemed to be at variance with their newly-formed tastes or personal ambition. In the early part of the month of May, a Bill for annexing to the Crown all abbeys, priories, nunneries, chantries, and hospitals passed through both Houses of Parliament. In the Upper House every one of the Lords Spiritual voted against it, and when passed, dissented from it by a formal act. It will thus be seen that the legal spiritual autliorities of the Church of England, as bound by oath and office, declined, as by every principle of morality they were bound, to take any part in this fresh act of sacrilege and robbery. While Parliament sat considering the new propositions, the clergy as of old were assembled in Convocation. To these the (jueen sent a somewhat arrogant message of warning, indicating with sufficient clearness to those who had already watched the course of recent events, what her royal will, as Supreme Governess ' As the Church of England in its corporate capacity takes little heed for this loss, and its authorities adopt no measures to restore the due observance of the day, a new and special society has been set up to compass and etVect this object, so much required, and so excellent in itself. PUBLIC DISPUTATIONS AT WESTMINSTER. 25 of the Established Church, was in reference to those proposi- tions. On being informed of the opposition of all the prelates,^ she had stamped her foot violently and sworn her usual expres- sive oath. But the fearless bishops, nobly and bravely doing their duty as guardians of the faith and their flocks, — neither hireUngs, wolves, nor robbers come into the fold " some other way," — drew up a profession of faith, and presented it to the House of Lords,^ asserting, firstly, the true and undoubted doctrine of the Holy Sacrifice and the Real Presence, in opposi- tion to a sentimental presence in the heart or mind of the receiver, which the innovators maintained ; secondly, the lawful and generally-recognised power and privileges of the Holy See ; and, thirdly, the exclusive right of the spiritual rulers of the Church Universal, and not of the laity or a lay assembly, to define, declare and decide upon, its doctrine and discipline. In consequence of this, and as one mode of blunting the power and destroying the influence of the bishops, a lawful dis- putation was appointed to be held in Westminster Abbey on March 31st, by which clever expedient the critical spirit of the period was fostered, public attention aroused, and time for more consideration of the grave circumstances which had arisen efficiently secured. The Lord Keeper Bacon, delegated to represent the Supreme Governess, presided, and the sittings of the Houses of Parliament were suspended, in order that idle, curious, or interested members might attend and witness the exciting dialectical contest in question. Numerous languid loungers,^ accustomed to the fashionable deliglits of the rat-pit ^ Bishop Tunstall wrote to Cecil from London on August 19, 1559, who declared that he could not consent to the visitation of his diocese, if it extended to the pulling down of altars, the defacing of churches, and the taking away crucifixes. — State Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. vi. p. 137. - The chief points of their profession stand thus : — " Primo, quod in sacramento altaris, virtute verbi Christ! a sacerdote debite prolati existentis, prcesens est realiter, sub speciebus panis et vini, naturale Corpus Christi, conceptum de Virgine Maria ; item naturalis ejus sanguis. "Item, quod, post consecrationem, non remanet substantia panis et vini, neque ulla alia substantia, nisi substantia Dei et hominis. "Item, quod in missa offertur verum Christi Corpus, et verus ejusdem sanguis, sacrificium propitiatorium pro vivis et defunctis. "Item, quod Petro apostolo, et ejus legitimis successoribus in Sede apostolica, tanquam Christi. vicariis, data est suprema potestas pascendi et regendi Ecclesiam Christi militantem, et fratres suos confirmandi. " Item, quod authoritas tractandi et definiendi de iis, qua? spectant ad fidem, sacramenta, et disciplinam ecclesiasticam, hactenus semper spectavit, et spectare debet, tantum ad pastores Ecclesia?, quos Spiiitus Sanctus ad hoc in Ecclesia Dei posuit, et non ad laicos." — Wilkins' Concilia, vol. iv. p. 179. ^ Thomas Cecil wrote to his father, Sir William, on July 25, 1561, to say 26 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. and bear-baiting, gathered for the anticipated entertainment. Protestant ballad-singers and buffoons, stationed near the west door of St. Margaret's Church, amused the lower classes by caricaturing religion. Various controversial subjects were dis- cussed within the Abbey ; e.g. whether prayers in Latin were to be henceforth permitted ; whether local churches have the right and power to set themselves up against the decisions and decrees of the whole Church of God ; and whether the Eucharist be a propitiatory sacrifice for the quick and the dead. On the side of the ancient faith were Archbishop Heath, Bishops White, Eayne, Scott, and Watson; with Dr. Cole, Dean of St. Paul's; Dr. Nicholas Harpsfield, Archdeacon of Canterbury and Judge of the Court of Arches ; and Dr. Langdale, Archdeacon of Lewes. On the side of the innovating party were Bishop Scory, Dr. Cocks, Mr. Home, Mr. Aylmer, Mr. Whitehead, Mr. Grindal, Mr. Ghest, and Mr. Jewell. The prelates in rochets and violet mantles assembled in the choir, where a long and narrow table down its pathway had been placed for their use, and were seated on the Gospel side. The other party, in gowns, putting their trust in the cjueen's delegate, and on the look-out for some of the good things of this world,i took their places on the south. The monks' stalls were filled with certain peers and others interested in the dispute. A gathering of exiled preachers and foreign divines in black cassocks and stiff white ruffs, armed with large tomes, from which to prompt and aid their friends, were grouped near the choir doors. The public, wherever a sight and hearing could be had, assembled in numbers. The whole dispute, conducted with singular one-sidedness, but anxiously listened to, was so unfair to the legal representatives of the Ancient Church, that the Catholic party, perceiving this, after vain remonstrances, and being wholly in the hands of Bacon who presided, wisely and resolutely retired on the second day. U!)on this Bishops White and Watson were at once, without notice, process, or trial, committed to prison in the Tower — a gross piece of high-handed tyranny.- Nothing, of course, could have that he had been present at the Court at Paris at a fight between a lion and three dogs, in which the dogs were victorious. — State Papers, Elizabeth, 1547-1580- ^ Edmund Chest, on August 31, 1559, wrote to inform Cecil that "Mr. Seth Holland will not renounce the Pope," and then solicits that he (Ghest) may succeed him in the deanery. — Domestic Papers, Elizabeth, vol. vi. p. '■^ Some writers assert that these two bishops' true ofTence was that they had already privately and solemnly threatened tlie queen with excommunication if she continued to intrude in matters inherently and essentially spiritual. TH£ BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 2/ been more effective in overcoming the force of their telling arguments, or in preventing their incisive logic and solemn appeals from having reasonable and just weight with the listeners. It was asserted in justification that they were thus punished for disobedience to the queen's delegate, who sat and acted in Her Most Sacred Highness's place, and who had enjoined them to proceed and not to retire ; but the real object of this bold action was to overawe others and overbear all legitimate opposition to the proposed parliamentary legislation. The Bill enjoining the new Prayer-Book soon afterwards became law, it having been carried in the Upper House by a narrow majority of three in a large assembly — a tolerably clear indication of the feeling against innovation and change which existed, and proving that such an act of tyranny as that just recorded was absolutely essential for the success of the innovators. The Act of Uniformity enjoining the use of the revised Service Book, indirectly decreed that on and after the Feast of St. John the Baptist, 1559, any one who said mass according to those rites of the Church of England which had been followed essenti- ally for nearly a thousand years, as well as any and every one who heard mass, or administered baptism or any of the sacra- ments according to the old directions and services, or who used any but the new, should, for the first offence, be fined one hundred marks ; for the second, four hundred marks ; and if these respective fines were not promptly paid, imprisonment for twelve months followed ; with imprisonment for life and the forfeiture of all goods and chattels if a third offence were proved. Jewell, though a severe and sour writer of bad theology, some- times became witty, and occasionally postured as a buffoon ; as, for instance, when he wrote to Peter Martyr, some months later, telling him the welcome news that the Catholics had no right to complain of the queen, for that mass had never before been so highly valued or expensive as then ; for, by God's gospel, it cost every spectator of it no less than two hundred crowns. On the day appointed, therefore, the public celebration of mass ceased. Those who elected to range themselves in opposi- tion to the innovators soon found what was involved in such a choice.^ As the records of this reign are examined step by step, and the harrowing tale of persecution is told, it will be seen with 1 On June 30, 1559, the Marquis of Winchester wrote to Cecil to inform him that the Dean and Canons of Winchester Cathedral, the Warden and Fellows of New College, and the Master of St. Cross' Hospital "left their services, and will enter no new service, being against their consciences." 28 TlIK cnUl>lCTT UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. what a, high hand those carried affairs who by the use of might over right had secured influence, authority, and power. All the varied " beggars-on-horseback " rode a random and rapid race to their due and proper goal. But to proceed step by step, and with due care, and to state exactly only that which can be surely and conclusively proved to be true. With the single exception of Anthony Kitchin, Bishop of Llandaff, who had been consecrated by Cranmer on May 3, 1545, without approval by, or authorisation from, Rome, the whole body of bishops, one and all, firmly resolved to refuse assent to this new legislation. Involving as it did both a fresh separation from the Chief Bishop of Christendom, whose saintly predecessor. Pope St. Gregory the Great, had sent St. Augustine to become a light to our country ; and being likely, as they believed, to augment all the complex evils of new and needless divisions, they declined to be participators in that which was obviously wrong. In their noble opposition — being unable to render to a woman, a female Cassar, the things of God — they were all firm and determined. They could not in conscience maintain that the queen was the Supreme Governor or Governess of the Church under Christ, and, therefore, repudiated the action and legislation of the civil authority as beyond its due and proper powers, and by the law of God altogether illegal. Amongst these are several names of men of high virtue and repute, names which because of their action at the crisis in question deserve to be had in everlasting remembrance. The first is that of Nicholas Heath. He had been consecrated Bishop of Rochester by Bonner of London, and others, in the chapel of London House, in the spring of 1540. Translated three years afterwards by Henry VIII. to the See of Worcester, he was thrown into prison and treated with great harshness under Edward VI. ; but on Queen Mary's accession, confessing his ])revious failings, and the aid he had given to the innovators, he was reconciled to the Church and made Archbishop of York and Lord High Chancellor. In his province he laboured assiduously, and was venerated and respected both by high and low. Edmund Bonner was another. A Worcestershire and Oxford man, he had for some years been one of Henry VIII. 's courtly chaplains, and had certainly made himself notorious enough by his mistaken zeal in promoting that king's divorce. When in Rome, in so doing (as he himself admits), he had behaved with great personal rudeness and insolence to the Pope. At home he had gone a considerable way on the " Reforming " road, and BISHOPS OF THE ANCIENT LINEAGE. 29 had even accepted many of the violent changes under Edward VI. ; but the fanaticism, heresy, and blasphemies then in favour at Court — working on all sides so many evils — were more than, by any strain of conscience, he could approve of or adopt. So the civil authorities deprived him of his See, which was given to Nicholas Ridley ; and Bonner likewise was cast into prison. Under Queen Mary, having been duly restored to his former episcopal seat, he did a great work in stemming the tide of irreligious revolution ; in restraining misbelievers ; and in build- ing anew the waste and desolate places of his important diocese. He was certainly unpopular with some; his acts in administering a harsh and cruel law have been considerably misrepresented, while his name has been cast out as evil by certain historical romancers or one-sided partisans. But when, after experiencing the evils of innovation, a man of resolute and settled principles, owning authority, acts with decision and boldness on the side of truth, he must expect opposition, and scorn the unjust con- demnation of petty and misinformed scribes, too often the trumpeters and apologists of error and falsehood. Cuthbert Tonstall, Bishop of Durham, old and afflicted, and Thomas Thirlby, Bishop of Ely, were committed to the care of Matthew Parker, the queen's new archbishop, and his lady, at Lambeth Palace. The former, Tonstall, soon died, some said of a broken heart, in November of the same year, and was buried in the parish church ; ^ the latter lived through eleven stirring years, and witnessed more changes and greater violence, passing to his rest in August of the year 1570. John White, born at Farnham, in Surrey, was educated at Winchester and New College, of which latter he was made a fellow in 1527. Successively head master and warden of Winchester College, he was consecrated Bishop of Lincoln by Bonner and others at St. Saviour's, Southwark, on April ist, 1554. Two years afterwards he was translated to Winchester, where his reputation for sweetness of disposition and sanctity was great. He preached the funeral sermon of Queen Mary, and was so affected at the loss which Her Majesty's death had occasioned,^ that for some time he stood in the pulpit over- whelmed with sincere grief, and speechless. Even as these resisted the innovations, so did others. James Turberville, Bishop of Exeter, so consecrated on the Feast of 1 "November (1570). The xxix day Cuthbret Tunstall a popish bishop was buryed."— MS. List of Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials at St. Mary's,Lambeth. - He "fell into such an unfeigned weeping that for a long space he could not speak." — Brief Vioi', etc., by Sir John Harington. 30 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. the Nativity of Our Lady in 1555, was faithful and true even unto death. Gilbert Browne, sometime Archdeacon of London, but subsequently Bishop of Bath and Wells, deprived by Queen Elizabeth for disallowing her spiritual supremacy, was then con- signed to the custody of Gregory Dodds,^ Dean of Exeter, and so died in 1569. David Pole, sometime Dean of the Arches Court, and subsequently Bishop of Peterborough, was deprived, because he likewise similarly resisted, and departed this life in June 1568. Ralph Baynes, a Yorkshireman and a great Hebrew- scholar, consecrated Bishop of Lichfield in 1554, was deprived in June 1559, and died five months afterwards. Queen Elizabeth sent Cuthbert Scott, Bishop of Chester, having first deprived him, to the Fleet Prison ; but he soon afterwards escaped, and died most devoutly at Louvain. Owen Oglethorpe, Bishop of Carlisle, was also deprived in 1559 — on the last day of which momentous year he slept his last sleep in peace. Thomas Watson, Bishop of Lincoln,^ was likewise turned out of his bishopric at the same time, as were also Thomas Goldwell, Bishop of St. Asaph, and John Feckenham, Benedictine Abbot of Westminster. Of these three, the first and the last were carefully imprisoned, first in the Marshalsea, and subsequently in the unwholesome dungeons of Wisbeach Castle, situated in the flat and unhealthy fen country of the east, and after much suffering died there in 1585. Goldwell escaped to the city of Rome, living there for more than a quarter of a century in great sanctity and full of years, when he too slept sweedy in Christ. Richard Pate, sometime Bishop of Worcester, who had been officially present at the Council of Trent in 1552, happily escaped to the Continent, and there died in peace. On the 9th of September 1559, Letters Patent were issued appointing a Royal Commission to confirm the election of jVLatthew Parker, who had been irregularly elected by a minority of the Chapter of Canterbury on the ist of August, and to give him episcopal consecration. At this time, ten of the English Sees were vacant by death • for many of the bishoiis had been thus called away from a scene of much anxiety and trouble, by a strange and fatal malady, some called it " the Plague," which wrought great havoc amongst all classes. Shortly afterwards, ' Some writers give another name to this dean wiio had the custody of this Bishop of Bath. - For a most interesting account of Bishop Watson, the reader should consult Sermons on the Sacraments by that prelate, edited by the Rev. T. E. Itridgctt, who has prefixed thereto an admirable "Biographical Notice" of the bishoji, and has edited the book with conspicuous care and ability. London: liurns & Gates, 1876. THE CONSECRATORS OF MATTHEW PARKER. 3 1 fifieen other bishops either resigned voluntarily, on marking what additional changes were about to take place, or were formally deprived by certain Royal Commissioners, to whom, for this purpose, Her Majesty had duly delegated that supreme spiritual authority which had been vested in her by Parliament. The Letters Patent concerning Parker's promotion had been addressed to Tonstall, Bishop of Durham ; to Bourne, Bishop of Bath ; to Poole, Bishop of Peterborough ; to Kitchin, Bishoji of Llandaff, all occupying Sees, and to William Barlow and John Scory, bishops without Sees. By an unusual and unexplained in- advertence, however, no clause enabling a bare majority, or a certain number without the rest, to act, was inserted in the docu- ment. So that if any individual, or more, declined the honour, the work of the Royal Commissioners could not be carried out. This Commission, therefore, remained unfulfilled, to the great vexation of the queen, and to the deep annoyance of Sir William Cecil, who found himself in a considerable difficulty. For, as it soon turned out, none of the prelates occupying the old Sees, and possessing due and recognised canonical juris- diction, could by any possible means be induced to act. Neither public arguments nor private threats could move them from their resolution of abstention from participating in any way in what they believed to be the irregular and uncanonical act resolved on. Besides the prelates who thus stood aloof (all, in truth, except Anthony Kitchin), there were several suffragan bishops alive, whose orders were undoubted, but who were, of course, without jurisdiction, some of whom had gone into retirement ; others had received benefices and were still hale and strong, but much disinclined for further change. Amongst these were Thomas Sparke, Bishop of Berwick, who lived until 157 1, and Robert Pursglove,^ Bishop of Hull, who only died in 1579. William Finch, Bishop of Taunton, went to his rest in the very year in which Parker was consecrated. Of Thomas Morley, Bishop of Marlborough, John Bradley, Bishop of Shaftesbury, and Thomas Manning, Bishop of Ipswich, all most probably alive at Elizabeth's accession, there are no existing records known. None of these suffragans, however, were sought out. ^ At Tideswell, in Derbyshire, where this bishop, Robert Pursglove was born, and educated under his uncle, William Bradshawe, Prior of Gisburne, in Yorkshire, he was also buried in 1575, and a memorial brass representing him in full pontifical vestments, with a series of verses in Latin and English still remains. He was Bishop-Suffragan of Hull, Archdeacon of Nottingham and Provost of the College of Rotherham. — See The Gentleman'' s Magazine, vol. Ixiv. part ii. p. iioi. London, 1794. 32 • THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. In conseciuence of the fiasco referred to, therefore, several learned clerks and canon lawyers, who either had a leaning to the Protestant party or were avowed members of it, viz. Drs. May, Weston, Leeds, Harvey, Yale, and Bullingham, were immediately consulted by Cecil, in order not only to suggest some remedy, but likewise to remove two very practical im- pediments to legal security and actual success. For just then Cecil could not move. His existing letters and ]\ISS. show that he was truly and completely puzzled. i These two leading practical difficulties stood thus : first, the law of the land unquestionably required the metropolitan and three provincials, or at least four bishops holding Sees, to confirm the election of a new Primate, but, as Cecil wrote, " There is ?io Archb. nor iiij bishopps now to be had;" and, secondly, the revised Ordinal, legalised under Edward VI. ,"^ had by Act of Parliament been formally and regularly abolished at the commencement of Queen Mary's reign. " This booke is not established by Farle/nenf" con- tinued the Secretary of State; while the ancient Pontifical of Salisbury, — Liber Jiega/is, — used then once again, had in its turn been just formally set aside by Ehzabeth. There was, therefore, no legal form for consecration in existence, or available at all. Here, then, was a grave dilemma. The canon lawyers in question, however, came to the con- clusion that under the difficult and pressing circumstances— for necessity notoriously has no law — a new Commission might be issued to Anthony Kitchin of Llandaff and to certain unattached I)relates, bishops without Sees, authorising them to confirm and consecrate" Matthew Parker. This advice was taken. Accordingly on December 6th, 1559, a fresh Commission by Letters Patent was appointed and issued, addressed to the occupant of the See of Llandaff; to Barlow, sometime Bishop of Bath, a prelate of very fly-blown character ; to Hodgkins, sometime Suffragan of Bedford; to Scory and Coverdale, bishops ; to John Salisbury, Suffragan Bishop of Thetford ; and 1 Stale Papers, Domestic, Queen Elizabeth, vol. v., July 1559. London, 1856. - "They have invented a new way to make bishops and priests and a manner of service and ministration that St. Augustine never knew, St. Edmund, Lanfranc, St. Anselm, nor never one Bishop of Canterbury, saving only Cranmer, who forsook his profession as apostata ; so that they must needs condemn all the bishops in Canterbury, but Cranmer and he that now is." — "The Addition concerning the Burning of St. Paul's" (a sixteenth century flydeaf). ^ It should be particularly noticed that this course of action would only touch the regularity, canonicity, and due legality of the consecration in question ; not its validity. CHRONICLE OF THE CONSECRATION. 33 to John Bale, Bishop, by Letters Patent, of Ossory, in Ireland, a boisterous and alarming fanatic, — enjoining them, or any four of them, to proceed to the confirmation of the election, and so to the consecration of the archbishop-elect. Kitchin, the only bishop with a See, save Bale, the coarse and foul-mouthed Protestant from Ireland, when he thus found himself utterly isolated from the rest of his episcopal brethren, deliberately and firmly declined to act. Reasoning and threats were again both made use of, but to no avail. He would not and did not appear. Accordingly, Parker's election was confirmed on the 7th of September 1559, and he subsequently received episcopal con- secration in the Chapel of Lambeth Palace on Sunday the 17th day of the same month and year, very early in the morning, at the hands of Barlow, Scory, Hodgkins, and Coverdale.^ As the records which chronicle this important act inform us, with unusual and almost unaccountable minuteness, the east end of the sanctuary on that occasion was hung with tapestry, and its floor laid with crimson cloth. In lieu of the abolished altar, a table had been placed at the east end, covered with a carpet, and having on it a cushion. To the north was set a seat for the archbishop-elect ; to the south, fald-stools for the consecrating ^ An able writer in the eighth vohime of The Union Kt-viao for 1S70, pp. 532, 533, believed to be one of our leading historical critics, thus refers to this inauguration of the new rulers, and to some of those who took a leadintr official part in it: — "That the ceremony was gone through admits of no more doubt than does the contempt of three at least of the four consecrators for the rite which they were called upon to perform. But it will be re- membered that Scory has been accused of performing a jesting ceremony in imitation of a consecration at the Nag's Head Tavern, where the consecrators met on the day of the confirmation of the new Primate after the work of ihe morning was done, and dined together. It is certain that Scory was quite capable of going through a mock ceremony of consecration, and, considering the character of the man, we think it is very likely he did. Neither of his colleagues would have been at all shocked at such a piece of profaneness ; and probably Parker himself would have made light of it. Parker himself was at least externally a decent character, but we do not find that he at all shrunk from intercourse with such rascals as Barlow and Scory were. \\ e have already alluded to Barlow, but Scory was the worst of the two. His course very much resembled Barlow's, with the additional scandal that he abjured his faith and dismissed his wife, and served under Bonner, in Queen Mary's reign. That he was chaplain to Archbishop Cranmer can add no infamy to Cranmer's name ; but it must be admitted to be a blot on Ridley's fair fame, that he also made Scory his chaplain. When we have added to this, that he preached at the burning of Joan Bocher for heresy, and that amongst other Protestant notions held by him, he was notoriously opposed to the consecration of churches, we have said all that is necessary to secure him from being quoted with approbation by Anglican divines." C 34 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. bishoi:)S were arranged, 'i'hese persons, as already pointed out, were Barlow, Scory, Hodgkins, and Coverdale. They came in long before it was light, accompanied by Parker, and preceded by four torchmen, by choir, chaplains, and legal officials. Edmund Grindal, Richard Cocks, and Edwin Sandys — all subsequently bishops — were also present, together with two registrars and two public notaries. Morning prayer was said by Pearson, a minister, and a sermon was preached by Scory; after which the archbishoj)- elect and the other bishops went out into the vestry, prepared themselves for the actual consecration, and again returned. Barlow took the chief part in the consecration, and with his attendants, Edmund Ghest, Archdeacon of Canterbury, and Nicholas Bullingham, Archdeacon of Lincoln, was vested in surplice and cope. Scory and Hodgkins appeared simply in surplices or rochets. Coverdale, who shunned what he termed such " heathen and Babylonish garments," appeared in some- thing less ornate, a simple woollen gown. In the rite the new and bald Ordinal of 1549 seems to have been almost exactly followed (though it had been legally set aside under Queen Mary, and never restored), save that, as the chief consecrator was not an archbishop, all the four bishops, when laying their hands upon Parker's head, each said : "Take the Holy Ghost, and re- member that thou stir up the grace of God which is in thee by the imposition of hands, for (iod hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power and love and soberness." In these words there was no specification whatsoever of the office proposed to be conferred. There was no unction either, nor was there any delivery of a pastoral staff, though this last-named rite was formally and ex- pressly enjoined in the Edwardian service presumed to have been used. Here then, and in this manner, the new succession began ; ^ and some persons maintain that its validity depended exclusively ^ On the suljject of the Nag's Head Fable, out of which uninformed controversialists have endeavoured to make capital, Dr. Lingard wrote as follows: — "Of this tale concerning which so much has been written, I can find no trace in any aiithor or document of the reign of Elizabetli. It is not improbable that the Commissioners, having confirmed the election, dined together at the Nag's Head, the inn chiefly frequented l)y the clergy at that period, and that this circumstance may have given rise to the story." — History of Em^iand, by John Lingard, D.D., p. 380, vol. vii. London, 1838. "It may be admitted as proved," writes Canon Estcourt, in his learned, able, and temperate treatise, entitled The Question of Anglican Ordinations Discussed, ^' that the Nag's y/ead story is a legend 'ivithottt foundation in fact, s.nd that the charge sometiTnes made of Parker and the first Elizabethan bishops assuming their place and discharging their functions without consecration of any kind is also unfounded " — p. 115. London, 1873. WILLIAM BARLOW A BISHOP. 35 u[jon William Barlow. Hodgkins, however, had been certainly consecrated by John Stokesley, Bishop of London, and two others, as early as 1537, and Scory and Coverdale by Cranmer in 155 1 ; so there is something of importance and consideration to be said in favour of the validity, though little for the canonical regularity, of this unprecedented official act. The objection to Barlow that he was possibly unconsecrated, because the actual register of his consecration is wanting, seems unreasonable and groundless ; for, during more than twenty years he publicly and continually acted as a bishop, and specially took a chief part in the mortuary masses for the soul of Henry VIII. ; and this in the presence of other prelates who notori- ously disliked change and dreaded innovation, and must have known well enough that, as regards his episcopal character, he was truly and actually what he was generally supposed to be. This consecration having been effected, Parker in turn con- firmed the election of Barlow to Chichester, and of Scory to Hereford ; and then with their aid soon afterwards, in due course, proceeded to consecrate the other persons who at the command of the Supreme Head had been elected to the various vacant bishopricks. . CHAPTER II. Prior to the later events recorded in the last chapter, a pro- clamation had been issued in the si)ring of the year, of which (irindal, writing from London to Hubert the Reformer, about the end of May, thus gave his opinion : — "Now at last, by the blessing of (iod, during the prorogation of Parliament, there has been published a proclamation to banish the Pope and his jurisdiction altogether, and to restore religion to that form which we had in the time of Edward VI. If any bishops or any beneficed persons shall decline to take the oath of abjuration of the authority of the See of Rome, they are to be deprived of every ecclesiastical function and deposed. No one after the Feast of St. John the Baptist next ensuing may celebrate mass without subjecting himself to a most heavy penalty." ' This proclamation produced immediate fruit. The inno- vators, who had been expecting it for some weeks, were, upon its receipt, at once prepared to act with boldness and determina- tion. The carrying out of its decrees was, of course, left to local authorities. To such, considerable latitude was given. These authorities, beforehand and from headquarters, had been privately but duly instructed. There was to be an immediate contemporaneous raid on everything valuable in the churches, more especially on all ecclesiastical articles wrought in precious metal, while the Church lands were to be revalued and possibly, as regards ownership, rearranged.^ Those country gentlemen, therefore, who were at once doubtful on their own part of what to do, and were doubted as to their zeal and competence by the agents of Cecil throughout the kingdom, were to be discreetly and confidentially sounded as to whether a substantial share in ^ Grindal to Conrad Hubert, Zurich Letters (Parker Society), vol. ii. No. 8. - An information made to Queen Elizabeth of the several abuses and frauds, etc., done unto the State, etc. — liarl. MSS. quoted in p. 124 of \\'eaver's Fimeral Monuments. 30 ACTION OF THE INNOVATORS. l"] the anticipated pickings and stealings might not probably quicken their interest and stir up their dormant energies to accomplish what the Council so earnestly desired should be immediately done. In order to rouse public opinion, therefore, scurrilous publica- tions from the pens of the returned exiles, or foreign Protestants, had been simultaneously circulated by thousands. Some of these were gross in their language, filthy in their suggestions, revolutionary in their proposals, and, though garnished with numerous texts of Scripture, blasphemous in their teaching.^ Such appear to have been sent for distribution to those laymen and apostate clergy who were known to be favourable to the tactics of the innovators. They were likewise freely distributed throughout the various Inns of Law, and especially amongst the students of Oxford and Cambridge. The authorised Com- missioners for continuing and completing the changes resolved upon, found that the various parishes which had been selected for their special visitation had been duly prepared for their advent by the receipt, no one knew how or from what quarter, of the inflammatory, infamous, and obscene literature in ejuestion." The language applied therein to the Pope was frightful, far worse than that which had recently been elimi- nated from the Litany ; but it will be found more than equalled by the ribald trash and rancorous letters and homilies which have been reprinted and issued of late years in portly volumes by modern Puritans.'^ In the afore-mentioned literature, the sacraments were disparaged, the priesthood ridiculed, the act of ordination written of as " a magical incanting," extreme unction styled "a corrupt following of the apostles" and the "dirty greasing of antichrist"; while the Blessed Sacrament of the Altar, hitherto reserved in a silvern or golden pix, was profanely called " Little Jack-in-the-box, " John in captivity," and treated with deliberate and artfully-designed indignities too fearful to describe. All over the kingdom, in fact, wherever the innovators were 1 In the 51st of the Injunctions of Queen Elizabeth in 1559, this crying evil was seen and acknowledged thus : — -"Because there is a great abuse in the Printers of Books, which from covetousness chiefly regard not what they print, so they may have gain, whereby ariseth the great disorder by publica- tion of unfruitful, vain, and infamous books and papers," etc. — Sparrow's Collections, p. So. London, 1671. " The natural descendants of these unpleasant scribes, judging by modern literature of the same type, may possibly be found amongst the modern Soupers of Connemara. ^ Publications of the Parker Society. 38 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. sufficiently numerous, daring, and profane, this kind of contro- versial blasphemy was current, and often became fashionable and popular • while some of the deeds done, by no means un- like in character to that about to be recorded, are in truth too frightful for any detailed description of them to be put into words. One record of such, with the swift punishments which followed, will for the present suffice. It has come down to us on good and sufficient authority, — a priest of the Church of God, — and affords, it is to be feared, too graphic and accurate a picture of similar dark deeds then perpetrated : — " After that the Holy Mass was, by public proclamation of the late queen, ^ commanded to surcease immediately in all places of England by Midsummer Day immediately following, four men of Dover, in the county of Kent, besides others which assisted at the same action, went into the church of the same town and took forth the copes, vestments, and other priestly ornaments belonging thereto, giving forth and boasting abroad that they would go fetch the Pope from Canterbury ; and the very next day after Midsummer Day, these companions came to Canterbury, put on the said copes, and other ornaments upon their backs, and in a pix, made to reserve the Blessed Sacrament of the Body of our Saviour Jesus, they put a dog's [excrement] ; and then beginning at St. George's Gate, rode in form of pro- cession quite through the city, till they came to Westgate, which done, the very same night they posted back again to Dover. " One of these four was Captain Roberts, who presently after carried all the copes, vestments, and other ornaments over the seas to Dunkirk, where he sold them. His miserable and wretched end was, that there leaping out of one small boat into another, to go to his ship, the boat he was in slipping away, he stepped short of the other, and so falling into the water, pitched his unhappy head upon an anchor, where he beat out his brains. " The second, shortly after running mad, cast himself off from Dover Pier into the sea, and so was drowned. "The third died of John Calvin's disease ; that is to say, he was eaten up with lice, being yet alive. " The fourth, who afterwards became minister of Maidstone, falling grievously sick, endured God's terrible judgments, for he stunk so abominably that none, no, not his own wife, could endure to come near him ; so that when they gave him meat to eat, they were forced to put it upon the end of a long pole, and so to reach it unto him through a window. For confirmation ^ The book was not published until the reign of King James the First. THE OATH OF HOMAGE. 39 whereof they are right credible and worshipful persons yet alive who can testify the same for a certain truth." ^ It is sometimes asserted, by interested or ignorant writers, that such acts as these never took place at all until the frightful and unhappy period of the Great Rebellion. Oliver Cromwell and Lord Brooke they condemn ; for Thomas Cromwell, Nicholas Ridley, Grindal, and Aylmer, they have only apologies or praise. The picture drawn by such writers of the days of Queen Elizabeth is consequently rose-tinted, peaceful, and pleasant to look upon. But it is a picture of pastoral beauty, peace, and repose, drawn rather from heated imagination than from stern facts. Horrible, in truth, as were the deeds of Dowsing and Prynne sixty years later, none of them equalled in atrocity those just related ; while these last-named unhappy Puritans, who had sucked in the principles of Protestantism and the rejection of all authority with their mothers milk, must have well known by tradition hundreds of dismal pre- cedents for their own sacrilegious iniquities and destructive acts, which may have spurred them on to overturn, murder, up- heave, commit outrages, and destroy, as they did to their hearts' content. It has been also asserted by recent writers, some evidently in good faith, that the Oath of Homage as at present taken by the bishops of the Church of England is a modern invention,- unknown until quite recent years, or at all events of no earlier antiquity than the disordered days of the revolutionary William of Orange, and of no formal authority. These writers, however, have only unintentionally helped to darken knowledge by bold assertions which, alas ! most efficiently exemplify their own ignorance and blundering. That oath, in the actual terms still made use of, came into existence when the new Church was originally set up, and it was certainly and dutifully taken by the first Protestant Archbishop of Canterbury on his knees before the queen. Sir William Cecil, no doubt, was its author, and possibly Dr. Matthew Parker himself had a hand in its revision ; 'From the preface to A Devout Exposition of the Holy Mass, by John Heigham, A. D. 1622. -"Can any of your readers tell us something about the history of this secret oath? Who was the first bishop who ventured to swear that he held his spiritualties from the Crown? Has any bishop denied this, or protested against its apparent meaning? Or will anyone give an explanation of the term which will relieve consciences, and effectually meet the charges our enemies are sure to bring against us— that here is proof positive of the un- mitigated Erastianism of the whole English Episcopate ?" — Rev. Charles Gutch, B.D., on the Oath 0/ Ho wage. 40 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. for he not only took it himself/ but thus created a precedent for all his suffragans, without any single exception, the most remote as well as the more proximate. No long period after her accession, the Lord Treasurer was directed by the queen, under the advice of Aylmer, an exile for his Protestantism, to assign the grand and effective church of the Austin Friars in the city of London — a church, be it noted, which in Edward the Sixth's time had already been thoroughly cleared out of all its ancient furniture and valuable ornaments, and left as bare and bald as possible — to the use of French, Flemish, and other foreign Protestants. Upon this Grindal, in full communion with the continental sectaries, applied to Calvin for a pastor, who in response despatched Monsieur Nicholas de Gallars, a French preacher, to undertake the office of superin- tendent there, and who received the bishop's "authority." The service, exactly modelled after those of the foreign conventicle, consisted of long prayers and longer sermons. But the disputes about free will and justification,^ original sin and prevenient 1 The following is the Oath of Homage, taken on February 23, 1560 (See Donizstic State Papei-s, Elizabeth, vol. xi.): — "I, Matthew Parker, Doctor of Divinity, now elect Archbishop of Canterbury, do utterly testify and declare in my conscience, that Your Majesty is the only Supreme Governor of this Realm, and of all other Your Highness's dominions and countries, as well in all spiritual or ecclesiastical things or causes, as temporal, and no foreign prince, person, prelate, power, superiority, pre-eminence, or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this Realm ; and therefore I do utterly renounce and forsake all foreign jurisdictions, powers, superiorities, and authorities ; and do promise that from henceforth I shall bear faith and true allegiance unto Your Majesty, Your heirs and lawful successors, and to my power shall assist and defend all jurisdictions, privileges, pre-eminences, and authorities granted or belonging to Your Highness, Your heirs and suc- cessors, or united and annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm. And further, / knoivledgc ami confess to have and to hold the said archbishopric of Canterbury, and the possessions of the same entirely, as well the spiritualties as temporalties thereof, only of Your Majesty and the Croivn Royal of this Your Realms. And as for the said possessions, I do my homage presently unto Your Highness, and to the same, and Your heirs and lawful successors, shall be faithful and true. So help me God, and the contents of this book." " We also, whose names be underwritten, being bishops of the several bishoprics within Your Majesty's Realm, do testify, declare, and acknow- ledge all and every part of the premises in like manner as the right reverend father in God, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has done." - "If any preacher or parson, vicar or curate, so licensed shall fortune to preach any matter tending to dissension, or to the derogation of the religion and doctrine received, that the hearers denounce the same to the Ordinaries, or to the next bishop of the same place ; but no man openly to contrary or to impugne the same speech so disorderly uttered, whereby may grow oftence and disquiet of the people, but shall be convinced and reproved by the Ortiinary." — Articles for Doctrine and Preaching, issued by Queen Eliza- beth, 1564. NEW DOCTRINES DANGEROUS. 4 1 grace, became so fierce and furious — for the preacher was con- stantly answered on the spot by his hearers — that, the civil authorities were often called in to settle biblical controversies, which had ended in a free fight and a riot, by turning out both preacher and hearers by force, and then locking the doors. Moreover, some of the foreign reformers who had arrived here, in order to stir up the sluggish nature of English Protestants, were persons who had so offended against the laws of their own country, that their presence in London was not particularly desired. We all know that justification by faith rather than by good works — for " good works are but filthy rags," as the preachers of this new gospel maintained — was their chief and favourite dogma ; a dogma not conducive either to sound morals or sober conduct. So that in the course of a very few years, i.e. in 1568, the queen issued a proclamation, ^ requiring all such intruding Protestants to be examined, as many of them were credibly believed to have been guilty of " rebellion, murders, robberies, or such like," and to have only come over here to preach their blasphemous gospel in order to avoid the reasonable consequences of notorious transgressions in their own country. Eventually, when their extravagances became dangerous and unendurable,- for it is always far easier to open the flood-gates of heresy and rebellion than to close them again — these foreign Protestants, on pain of imprisonment and loss of goods, were ordered to leave the kingdom within twenty-one days. Such a strong measure, of course, excited them greatly ; and their preachers were fierce in its denunciation and furious with Cecil. Many of these openly maintained, as Knox and Calvin had done long ago, that the rule of women in the Lord's fold was a monstrous anomaly and a sin ; and dealt out covert maledictions at the queen and her secret love affairs most unsparingly, using language rather forcible than either choice or clean. Soon after the queen's accession, Giovanni Angelo de Medicis, Pope Pius IV., wrote a beautiful and even touchmg letter to Her 1 Wilkins' Concilia, vol. iv. pp. 204 and 254. - " Here under the shelter of the reformed religion, they maintained several gross errors and heresies. Some of these were German Anabaptists ; and others propagated opinions of a very dangerous tendency ; and thus misbelief gained ground, and some of the ignorant natives were miserably misled. To stop the spreading of this infection, the queen, by a proclamation, ordered these hereticks, both aliens and natural-born English, to depart the kingdom within one-and-twenty days. The penalty of staying longer was imprison- ment and forfeiting their goods." — An Ecclesiastical History of Great Britain, by Jeremy Collier, vol. vi. p. 322. London, 1846. 42 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN EEIZABETH. Majesty, sending it by a nuncio, the Abbot Vincent Parpaglia,^ who was directed to travel through Lower Germany towards England. But the queen, learning the purport of his coming, and having consulted her Council, who feared any change of purpose on her part, declined to allow him to land in her kingdom. He had reached Calais, but was thus compelled to return. The paternal action of His Holiness has been so often mis- represented that the actual words of this fatherly communication ought to be carefully studied : — "Very dear daughter in Christ, AVe send you greeting, health, and the apostolical benediction. How greatly We desire (Our pastoral charge so requiring it) to procure the salvation of your soul, and to provide likewise for your honour, and the security of your kingdom withal, God, Who is the Searcher of all hearts, knoweth ; and you yourself may understand by what We have given in charge to this Our beloved son Vincentius Parpaglia, Abbot of St. Saviour's, a man well known to you, and well approved by Us. Wherefore, We do again and again exhort and admonish your Highness, most dear daughter, that, rejecting evil counsellors, which love not you but themselves, and serve their own lusts, you would take the fear of God into council with you, and, acknowledging the time of your visitation, would show your- self obedient to Our fatherly persuasions and wholesome counsels, and promise to yourself from Us all things that may make not only to the salvation of your soul, but also whatsoever you shall desire from Us, for the establishing and confirming of your princely dignity, according to the authority, place, and office committed unto Us by God. And if so be (as We desire and hope), that you shall return into the bosom of the Church, We shall be ready to receive you with the same love, honour, and rejoicing, that the father in the gospel did his son returning to him ; although Our joy is like to be the greater, in that he was ^ Some writers have asserted, but with Httle or no evidence of the fact, that Parpaglia bore a message from the Pope vokinteering to reverse his pre- decessor's sentence against the so-called "marriage" of Henry VHP with Anne Roleyn, and to sanction the revolutionary changes which had been made anew in the divine office, on condition that the queen acknowledged His Holiness's supremacy ; but from the days of Camden down to those of ("hancellor Harington of Exeter, no sufficient and conclusive proofs of this pio;30sition have been forthcoming.- — See Camden's Annals, p. 46. London, 1688. Tierney's edition oi Dodifs Church History, vol. ii. p. 147. London, 1839. Collier s History, vol. vi. p. 395. London, 1840. Ware's Foxes and Firebrands, part iii. p. 15 ; and Pope Fins IV. and the Book of Common Prayer, by E. C. Harrington. London, 1856. THE bishops' lands. 43 joyful for the safety of one son, but you, drawing along with you all the people of England, shall hear Us and the whole company of Our brethren (who are shortly, God willing, to be assembled in a General Council, for the taking away of heresies, and so for the salvation of yourself and your whole nation), fill the Church Universal with rejoicing and gladness. Yea, you shall make glad Heaven itself with such a memorable fact, and achieve ad- mirable renown to your name, much more glorious than the crown you wear. But concerning this matter, the same Vin- centius shall deal with you more largely, and shall declare Our fatherly affection toward you ; and We entreat your Majesty to receive him lovingly, to hear him diligently, and to give the same credit to his speeches, which you would to Ourself "Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, under the Fisherman's Ring, May 5th, 1560, in the first year of our Pontificate." ^ But to proceed. Edmund Grindal, who, after a fashion, but with considerable canonical irregularities, had been elected Bishop of London, was by Parker and others consecrated at Lambeth on St. I'homas' Day, 1559, at the same time that Richard Cocks, Rowland Meyrick, and Edwin Sandys were likewise consecrated for the Sees of Ely, Bangor, and Worcester. The first and most striking fact which was brought home to the new bishops, after they had secured possession of their temporalties, was the extremely small amount of money which the episcopal lands and manors actually produced. Many had been already sold or alienated ; of those remaining, long leases had already been granted by the Crown during vacancies ; while all the lands had sorely deteriorated by want of due attention and proper cultivation. The prelates, therefore, made formal complaint to Sir William Cecil ; but on the part of the Supreme Governess he delicately rebuked them for their importunity,'^ ])ointing out with grim satire that spiritual persons should learn to be satisfied with spiritual things, and not look too anxiously after things temporal. Preparations also were about this time made for filling up the many other Sees vacant, a work in which Sir William Cecil took a leading and prominent part. Even at this period he foresaw clearly enough that the " foreign gospel " and its strange preachers 1 MS. "Vatican," 2896, n. 214. MS. "Titus," C. vii., n. 11. Brit. Museum. ■^ "When the bishops sued to the Lord Treasurer for revenue, they were merely answered that spiritual things be meetest for spiritual men." — R ny to Challoner, Foreign Papers, Elizabeth, p. 137, No. 323, Nov. 23, 1559. 44 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. might cause him considerable inconvenience. He was extremely careful, therefore, not to commit himself absolutely to their policy. And though he occasionally condescended to employ them and secure their help, he was shrewd enough to keep them all at arm's length. The new bishops found themselves likewise terribly embarrassed by the pressing want of clergy,^ and had no means to their hands with which to supply it. Many of the parish churches, having lost their chief endowments and been completely cleared out of everything of value in metal, — in some nothing but a tin or latten vessel remaining for the Communion board,- the windows of the choir broken, the lead from the roofs stripped off, and side chapels or chantries often destroyed for the sake of the stones of which they had been built, — even the exiles from Geneva and elsewhere declined to serve them. Numerous cures w^ere vacant, and several hundreds of chapelries unserved ; students for the ministry at Oxford and Cambridge had been so reduced in numbers that they might be now counted rather by tens than, as of old, by hundreds or even by thousands.'' Those of the cast- out monies who were in any way competent for the office had been duly promoted to the priesthood six years previously in Queen INIary's reign ; others, however, had long ago taken to secular callings and married;^ some, again, had become parish ^ " Many of our parishes have no clergymen, and some dioceses are without a bishop. And out of that very small number who administer the sacraments throughout this great country, there is hardly one in a hundred who is both able and willing to preach the Word of God." — Zurich Letters, 1st series, No. 35, From Thomas Lever to BuUinger, dated loth July 1560. "In the diocese of Durham the ministry is destitute of a sufficiency of worthy men, there and in other places." — Robert Home, Dean of Durham, to Cecil, Nov. 13, 1500, Foreign Papers, ElizahetJt. London, 1865. "Where is there any learned number to supply their rooms? There be few schools abroad to bring up youth ; but so many benefices so small that no men will take them ; and so the parishes he unserved, and the people wax wiihout fear of God.'' —Bishop PHhi/igtoii's Works (Parker Society), p. 593. London, 1S42. - "That the parish provide a decent table, standing on a frame, for the Communion Table." — Queen Elizabctli s Articles for Doctrine and Preacliing, 1564. ^ In the year 1561, as Anthony a Wood has put on record, so frightful was the emptiness and depression at Oxford, that throughout the whole year there were no degrees given " in Divinity, and but one in the Civil Law, three in I'hysic, and eight in Arts," and, in the Act of the same year, " not one in Divinity, Law, or Physic." The students also were so poor and beggarly that many of them were forced this and the year following to obtain licence under the Commissary Seal, to require the alms of well-disposed people. — Annals of the University, by Anthony a Wood. Snh anno 1561. "^ E.g. Hugh Wren (son of Gcoflrey Wren, Confessor to Henry VIL), MUCH PREACHING IN DEMAND. 45 clerks and sextons ; some had been charged on suspicion, cap- tured, and allowed to rot and die in prison ; others had gone abroad in their extremity; a few, in despair of securing anything more suitable, had undertaken the office of steward to noblemen and gentlemen who had obtained possession of the monastic lands ; while many of the monks had found, what had been denied to them throughout the last years of their chequered lives, peace and rest in death. Amongst the more fanatical innovators, preaching, and the desire to attend it, had at this time become such a rage — the Communion Table, as well actually as metaphorically, being now wholly overshadowed by the pulpit — that unless a divine could expound a crabbed text with art, skilfully analyse its various parts in detail, compare it with twenty other texts dealing with the same or a somewhat similar subject, and then adroitly branch off with perplexing dissertations in half-a-dozen unexpected directions, he was fearlessly written down as at once incompetent and godless, lacking spiritual gifts and free grace, a mere dumb dog, unworthy of hire or notice. Such human treasures as those who could thus preach popu- larly for two hours or so without any break or mishap were still few and far between. Though fully appreciated, they could not be secured every day or anywhere. Their homiletic gifts were choice, rare, and superfine. The demand for them, conse- quently, was very greatly in excess of the supply. But even these when handling Scripture — often casting pearls before swine — were properly shunned, with a shudder, by those who at heart clung to the ancient faith. Inferior officers of the Establishment, the illiterate and ill- mannered, the "sundry artificers" and those of "base occupa- tion," to whom Parker and Grindal had, it may be supposed, given some kind of new ordination, and a special commission to preach,^ were required, instead of "holding forth out of their chanting priest of Hanslope, Bucks, at the dissolution in 1547, was sixty years of age. In 1549 a pension of 6s. 5d. a year, together with the Chanting Lands, were granted to him for twenty-one years. He had a son of the same name, whose wife was Margaret, by whom he had four daughters. This son was buried at Hanslope, 29th August 15S5. He belonged to the race of Matthew Wren, Bishop of Ely, and Sir Christopher Wren, the architect of St. Paul's Cathedral ; and his will, proved at Oxford, was dated 28th August 1585- ^ "The supply of clergy was insufficient, and even the withdrawal or re- moval of what but for this would have been so considerable a portion as one in fifty-three of the beneficed clergy in England, seriously embarrassed the new bishops. As in other times, men unqualified by learning, and by the possession of clerical gravity, or deficient in regard to our ideal moral 46 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. own heads " — as the phrase then stood, and so remained almost to our own day — were required to dehver over and over again the "godly" but somewhat coarse-languaged homilies which the innovators had authoritatively put forth for the practical use of their ill-instructed,^ ignorant, and vulgar allies. If these homilies in question were those which satisfied the not over-refined tastes of the new prelates, we need not stay to contemplate what was the kind of taste then popular with these new and too truly " inferior " clergy. The dearth of spiritual privileges and the desolation consequent thereupon became by consequence truly awful. Churches were closed, for there were none to serve them. Infants remained unbaptized, women were not churched, children were unin- structed. In some places the dead were buried, like dogs, without either rite or ceremony ; save that poor and pious neighbours gathered near to tell their beads and recite the De profxindis^ and this often at the risk of condign punishment. Even in cathedrals the Communion was administered but once a quarter, though ordered once a month. Sometimes the authorities tolerated the ministerial acts of persons who had not received any but Presbyterian ordination, and possibly not even that. The " Lord's board," as it was called, was brought down with its tressels from the east end of the chancel,- and placed, as for a domestic meal, with benches round, in the middle of the choir. It was covered with an ample table-napkin of Damascus cloth. A large leathern bottle of wine,^ some loaves of bread, and a knife, sometimes a pewter plate and flagon, or occasionally a wooden standard, however truly they conformed to the naturally low standard of general moraliiy, were ordained and beneficed to supply the deficiency of the first years of the reign of Elizabeth. — 7/ie English Episco/a/c at the Accession pf Elizabeth, p. 289. Union Revidv. London, 1875. ^ "We are only wanting in preachers, and of these there is a great and alarming scarcity. The schools also are entirely deserted." — Zurich Letters, John Jewell to I'eter Martyr, 1st series, No. 38. Parker Society. - The table is ordered to be "set in the place where the altar stood . . . savini^wlien the Couii/ninion 0/ the Sacrament is to be diitribnteJ, at which time the same shall be so placed in good sort within the chancel. . . . A/ter the Communion is done, from time to time, the same holy table to be placed where it stood before." — Queen Elizabeth's Injunctions, 1559. •* "A bottyl of leather and a flagon of wh'te met all for wine for the Supper." — Churchwardens' Accounts of St. Mary Magdalene's, Oxford, 1551-2. "//onu's/ic S/atc J\jf'crs, Elizabelh, vol. xvii. For a due account of Her Majesty's ability and proficiency in profane swearing, the reader should consult her godson .Sir John Harington's A-^wj^^ Anliqui:. ACTION AGAINST THE OLD CLERGY. 49 taries of the Church it was firmly and resolutely refused. More than twelve of the deans of cathedral and collegiate churches deliberately declined to take it, and, as some avowed, were quite prepared for the consequences of their refusal. Numbers of the archdeacons, canons, and prebendaries did the same,i as was the case also with numerous heads of colleges and influential members of the two universities. Amongst the parochial clergy, an important rather than a considerable minority were likewise equally true to the faith of their fathers; declining with firmness and resolution to acknowledge an illegitimate woman as, in any form or shape, or because of any legislation, the Supreme (ioverness of the Church of England. In this they were some- times supported by the public.^ Many of them, however, were passive and obedient, waiting for another change, and hoping earnestly for better and brighter times. One reaction had happily taken place; others, they assumed, might possiblv toUow. As a consequence of their refusal, certain of the dignitaries in question were either cast into prison and loaded with chains, or promptly banished the realm. No favour was shown to any who resisted the enactment, except, for personal reasons, to a few feeble and worn-out clergy who were cruelly denied the consolations of religion, confined to special localities, and not permitted to go beyond well-defined limits. But the old priests ■'• retained their well-deserved popularity. The Friars Observant at Greenwich, some of the Benedictines from Westminster, the Carthusian Fathers in Richmond, as well as the Bridgetine Nuns of Sion House, one and all, marking the signs of the times, left their desolated countr}^, and for ever turned their backs upon their former sacred homes. Persons of blood and rank, noble- men and gentlemen, and sometimes, indeed, noble and delicate ^ "The whole of the clergy deprived at this time stands thus: fourteen bishops, already mentioned ; three bishops-elect, one abbot, four priors, and one abbess ; twelve deans, fourteen archdeacons, sixty canons or prebendaries, one hundred priests, well preferred ; fifteen heads of colleges in Oxford and Cambridge, to which may be added about twenty doctors in several faculties." — Ecclesiastical History of Great Britain, by Jeremy Collier, vol. vi. p. 242. London, 1846. - Oil the inauguration of Dr. Francis as the new Protestant Provost of Queen's College, Oxford, there was a serious riot. — Letter of Scholars of Oxford to Cecil, May n, 1561, Domestic State Papers, Elizabeth, No. 7, vol. xvii. '^ Some old priests, Brigg, Blaxton, Arden, Gregory, and others, though driven out of Exeter, were received in Bishop Scory's diocese (Hereford) with acclamation, and feasted in the streets by torchlight — of which he wrote and made complaint.— /)<7W(?j-i'?V State Papers, 1547-15S0, August 17, 1561. D 50 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. ladies likewise, cheerfully left their pleasant mansions and ancient possessions, suffering any spoiling of their goods and destitution rather than give uj) their faith. The most respected and best learned of the universities, becoming exiles, were scattered throughout foreign lands, M-eeping by strange waters because of the religious desolation of their native homes. Some found a refuge and home in Flanders, others in France, some in Italy. As regards the latter country, it is interesting to remember that the saintly Archl)ishop of Milan, Charles Borromeo, received the English exiles in that beautiful city with cordial kindness. He truly bound up their spiritual wounds, pouring in oil and wine. For several years, indeed, His Grace's own confessor was a Welsh canon, Dr. (jriffith Roberts, and his last grand vicar was another Welshman, Dr. Owen Lewis. For the inferior clergy these days were indeed days of trial. Many of them obviously conformed to the new order of things for fear of poverty, others because they preferred the licence and t'reedom which an acceptance of the new doctrines practicallv ensured. Step by step, those who would not take the Oath of Supremacy ^ were " weeded out," as one of the new prelates phrased it ; but though the Visitors and Commissioners appointed by the queen went about their work with a will, the practical difficulties which met them at every turn were considerable. Though the innovators were a small minority, they were perfectly united and determined, while the great body of the people were against the changes ; and the hearty resolutions of such were constantly met with by those violent and foul-mouthed officials who had been sent forth to continue and complete the revolution.- By degrees, however, because of the constant and continual fines imposed for nonconformity, many who clung to the ancient faith did not altogether decline to attend the new service, and even to receive the bread and wine distributed at what was called "the Supper of the Lord." The exact state of affairs at this melancholy period was grajih- ically described by a competent judge and author, Edward Rishton, a watchful and observant jjriest, who followed a con- ^ Those who resigned their appointments rather than do so were possibly under two hundred and fifty in number ; but of those who remained, hoping for another change and l)etter days, several hundreds, possibly some thou- .sands, heartily disliked the new religion and its founders. - John Scory, Bishop of Hereford, writes to Cecil, June 21, 1561, to say that there are great disorders in the cathedral church of his diocese, which, he charitably remarks, is " a very nurserye of blasphemy, whordom, pryde, superstition, and ignorance." — Domestic State Papers, Elizabeth, vol. xvii. No. 32. THE NEW ORDINATIONS. 51 siderable number of the clergy of the ancient faith, in a total denial of the validity and value of the new ordinations. Some moderns may have desired, and yet desire, that a different contemporary judgment might have been given at the time when the new rites and regulations were first set forth and adopted ; but from the days of Thomas Goldwell, Bishop of St. Asaph, ^ to those of Canon Edgar Estcourt of St. Chad's Cathedral, in Birmingham, one uniform opinion and tradition appears to have been held. The limited number of exceptions only serve to prove the rule. " It may be confidently asserted," writes Canon Estcourt, "that there is an unbroken tradition from the year 1554 to the present time, confirmed by constant practice in France and Rome, as well as in this country, in accordance with which Anglican ordinations are looked upon as absolutely null and void ; and Anglican ministers are treated simply as laymen, so that those who wish to become priests have to be ordained un- conditionally. Not a single instance to the contrary can be alleged." ^ There are certain difficulties which, it must be frankly allowed, have been always felt by learned Roman Catholics and Orientals with regard to the fact of Parker's consecration, and which must be duly faced and removed before any recognition of the validity of English ordinations can be reasonably expected either from the Eastern or Western Churches. Anglicans must not remain contented with assertions which appear to satisfy themselves, but be prepared with arguments and conclusions which will serve to convince their opponents. The modern Easterns, though personally civil and polite enough, frequently repudiate our ordinations with scorn.^ Such, ^ A contemporary inquiry was made at Rome in the spring of the year 1570, as well concerning the character of the new orders as of the assumed jirelatial dignities held by those who had not been previously ordained priests. Goldwell, Bishop of St. Asaph, gave his opinion, as did also Dr. Nicholas Morton, of the diocese of York ; Henry Henshaw, of the diocese of Lincoln ; Edmund Daniel, Dean of Hereford ; Thomas Kinton, of the diocese of Sarum, and others. All the opinions of these persons were against the validity of the new rites and ordinations. — See, for the document itself, the continuation of the Annah of Baron'nts, by Laderchius, vol. iii. pp. 197 et seq. - The Question of Anglican Ordinations Discussed, by £. E. Estcourt, M..'\.,pp. 145-6. London, 1873. •* The late Archbishop of Syra and Tenos, even more civil than some of his brethren, reordained absolutely the Rev. James Chrystal, an American clergyman of the Protestant Episcopal Church ; while the Servian Archi- mandrite, who once gave the Holy Communion to a London clergyman, the Rev. William Denton, who had rendered good service to the Servian Church, was most severely reprimanded by authority, and made to give a promise in 52 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. in their judgment, are on a level with the ministries of Lutherans, Calvinists, and continental Protestants. At Rome every care is taken to arrive at the truth, so that the inadequate defences regarded as sufficient and satisfactory by some at home, will never pass muster in the presence of the skilled theologians of the Eternal City.^ A huge assumption, as the majority of Roman Catholic theologians maintain, that all was right in Parker's case, is, of course, easily enough made ; but detailed proofs of facts and satisfactory replies to objectors often give trouble, entail research, and yet remain insufficient for the purpose. As regards the fact of Parker's consecration at Lambeth on the 17th of December 1559, it must be admitted that the following difficulties appear to exist : — 1. The Lambeth Register was not publicly produced — in fact, no reference of any sort or kind, either in attack or defence, was made to it — until 16 13, fifty-three years after the date of Parker's consecration ; though the new bishops had been constantly pressed to show some written proofs of their consecration by Nicholas Sander, AVilliam Allen, Stapleton, Pristow, Reynolds, and more especially by Harding in his Confutation of Jewel Ps Apo/ogie, first published only six years after Parker's consecration, i.e. in 1565. Why it was not produced is, to say the least, singular, if not mysterious. 2. Stowe, the chronicler, though he, as any reader may see, was often exact and circumstantial in recording the most trivial matters, and duly put on record the consecration of Reginald Pole and others, omitted by some strange oversight any account whatsoever of Parker's consecration, or any reference to it, though he was very intimate with this new prelate, and was frequently a guest at Lambeth Palace. 3. Holinshcd and Stowe both make the remarkable statement that Arclibisiiop Parker, and (irindal. Bishop of London, were ])resent at the obsequies of Henry H., King of France, performed in St. Paul's Cathedral on the 8th and 9th of September 1559;"- wriling that be would never repent that liis canonical offence ; and this in a lormal document which described the Church of England as "unorthodox" and "Protestant," and the clergyman in question as "without the priest- hood." ' The author had hoped (if he mav be pardoned for writing thus") that his book maintaining the I 'alidity of t lie Ordiiia/ioits of the Church of En^^land, in which he made the best defence in his power, might have called our bishops' attention to a subject of the gravest moment, which touches the organic life of the Establishetl Church ; but at ]nesent these have made no sign. - I'arker had been elected on August 1st. In a letter to the Privy Council, DOCUMENTS CONCERNING ORDINATION. 53 yet the first-named, Parker, was certainly not consecrated until December 19th, and Grindal not until the 21st of that same month. The terms " archbishop " and " bishop," therefore, were consequently most inexact ; unless, indeed, the Queen's Letters Patent enjoining the respective chapters to elect these persons, were regarded by Stowe as of more importance than any other previous or subsequent rite. 4. From an original document in the State Paper Office, ^ it is clear that Matthew Parker, who then styled himself "elect Arch- bishop of Canterbury," did homage for his temporalties before the queen at Westminster, in February 1559. At that period he certainly was neither elected nor consecrated, and it is equally certain that bishops did not usually do such homage until their consecration had been effected. Here it may be remarked by some that February 1559 may possibly mean February 1560; but if so, then the Lambeth Register, in which his consecration is recorded as having taken place in December 1559, is altogether wrong; for Parker, in February 1560, could never have then wittingly termed himself merely "elect arch- bishop," when, according to the said register, he had been actually consecrated two months previously. 5. Again. There is in the State Paper Office - a Commission from the queen, constituting Parker, who is termed " Arch- bishop-elect of Canterbury," Grindal, who is styled "Bishop- elect of London," and others, Commissioners for carrying into execution the Acts for the Uniformity of Common Prayer, and for restoring to the Crown the ancient jurisdiction of the State Ecclesiastical. This document is dated the 19th of July 1559, nearly a fortnight before the election of Parker to the See of Canterbury, which took place on the ist of August; conse- ([uently the use of the term "bishop-elect" is inexact, or else the dates of the Lambeth Register, as regards these events, are wrong. At all events, this State Paper is distinctly and remark- ably out of harmony with them. dated the 27th of that month, he signed it " Matth. C[antaur.]" And it appears, as Canon Estcourt points out (on p. 83 of his Qiiestiau of Anglican Ordinations), that he is addressed in the same style in official documents. Another remarkable error is that, in an Order of the Queen, dated 26th October, it is asserted that, amongst others, the elect-bishop of Chichester, Dr. William Barlow, "remains unconsecrated." — State Papers, Elizabeth, vol. vii. p. 19. ^ It is referred to in the State Papers of Elizabeth, Domestic, vol. xi,, under the date 23rd February 1560, and is printed at length in Collier's Ecclesiastical History of Great Britain, vol. ix. pp. 331-2. London, 1846. - Domestic State Papers, Elizabeth, vol. v. No. 18. London. 1S56. 54 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. Whether these various difficulties, either apparent or real, are not removed by the knowledge that certain independent docu- ments exist, plainly proving that the ceremony took place on December 17th, 1559, is, of course, quite another question, which each investigator must determine for himself after duly weighing the harmonious or conflicting evidence on both sides. But that the evidence is conflicting, and that difficulties do exist, cannot be doubted. There are some persons, it should here be noted, who go further, and maintain that the whole of the first and earlier parts of Parker's Register, including the heraldic title-page, are in one handwriting; and that this is of a later date than 1559, possibly of the subsequent reign of James I., when, in the new Church of ICngland, different and less questionable opinions concerning the subject began to prevail. But this, of course, is a subject for impartial Catholic theologians and skilled paleographers satis- factorily to decide. But to return to the course of public events. Immediately the clergy found themselves at liberty to enter the honourable estate of matrimony, most of the reforming party took to them- selves wives. Some had already done so secretly. Archbishoj) Cranmer's distinguished precedent of having had two ^ was in many cases dutifully followed by the new bishops, though of course, these wives were procured one after the other, and not both at the same time. But these married prelates, and, indeed, the married clergy likewise, were looked upon with intense dislike, and often with contempt, by the people in general; while the terms which were sometimes applied both to their wives and children were much more plain and impressive than compliment- ary.'-^ Even the Queen's Highness disliked the wives of prelates. As a rule, the reforming clergy, when waxing amorous, could only secure helpmeets from the lowest of the people — almost all others turned away with disgust at the proposal ; ■' while many of those thus secured owned questionable or fly-blown characters, had been waiting-women, ale-house attendants, or publicly dis- reputable. The gravest scandals by consequence arose in several places,* to which from time to time the attention of ^ "The husband orotic wife." — Titus i. 6. - See Briefe Confutation of a Godlie IVarniug, p. 47. London, 1572. ' " No knight's daughter, nor esquire's, could be so certified to accept of him." — Briefe Coiifiitntion, etc., p. 50. ■* "Because there hath grown offence, and some slander to the Church, by lack of discreet and sober behaviour in many ministers of the Church, both in choosing of their wives and indiscreet living with them, the remedy whereof THE queen's injunctions. 55 the Queen's Privy Councillors was officially drawn. On two occasions Sir William Cecil wrote contemptuously of those whose matrimonial acts had been called into question, to the great annoyance of Parker. The subject was new, and certainly difficult. Sir John Mason informed Cecil that " in sundry par- ticular churches at this present [there is] such fleshly demeanour in appearance, as small difference is to be seen in any point between them and lay-houses, wherewith the world taketh occasion of offence, and God, I think, is not much pleased."^ Some other instances of wantonness and demoralisation in the houses of the ministers cannot be further alluded to. The Queen's Injunctions had laid down some excellent and practical rules on the subiect ; but these appear to have been too generally disregarded. When a minister or deacon had made choice of some buxom woman or country lass, and she was certified to be ready, or at least not unwilling, to accept him, the bishop of the diocese and two neighbouring justices of the peace on some holiday, and in church in presence of the congregation, were to examine her personally, "behind and before, in mind and in body, by inspection and by report," to see that she was whole and sound, healthy, and of good repute, free from either moral or physical blemish,'- and, in order to find this out, her parents, or, if they were dead, two of her nearest kinsfolk, or " her master or mistress whom she serveth," being summoned to appear, "shall make a good and certain proof thereof " both to the minister of the parish and to the assembled congregation. Such was usually known as a " matrimonial inquisition " : profane or over-witty persons sometimes gave it a less pleasant name. Having passed through this disagreeable but perhaps necessary ordeal, the bishop and the magistrates, if satisfied, gave per- mission, under their hands and seals, to the two persons more particularly interested, to gratify their praiseworthy intentions "with all due and convenient speed." A similar process was also necessary and enjoined by the queen in the case of bishops. Only here special commissioners of rank — -not mere justices of the peace — were appointed to undertake the needful examination, and with these were associ- is necessary to be sought." — Queen Elizabeth's Injunctions to the Clergy, A.D. 1559. 1 State Papers, August il, 1561, Sir John Mason to Secretary Cecil. - A transcript of the minutes of such an examination — lucjiiisitio Afatri- monialis, etc. — is before me as I write. It took place in an Oxfordshire Peculiar of the ancient diocese of Lincoln, before its rearrangement ; and, though faithfully paraphrased in the text above is, in some of its details, lar too coarse to be verbally quoted. 56 THE CIIlKCIl UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. ated the venerable metropolitan, himself a married man. For such an exalted ecclesiastical officer this was certainly a new, as no doubt it must have been an interesting, duty. Deans of cathedrals and heads of houses, fired with matrimonial ambitions, when proposing to wed, were to apply to the official visitor of their respective institutions, whose duty it was, as the Supreme Governess enjoined, to make a similar personal examina- tion of the wife-designate, and to see that the proposed union " tend not to the hindrance of their house." Archbishop Parker was terribly mortified at the queen's formal edict about the marriage of the clergy, and horrified at her unscriptural and unfeeling language. He wrote to Sir William CeciP to explain his manifold grievances, and evidently looked for some word of consolation from him. He went so far as to lament that under such conditions he had ever accepted the See of Canterbury. If the bishops' inferior servants might have their wives within the precincts of the cathedrals, and in the useful outhouses of the episcopal palaces — if these respectable officers might rock their offspring's cradles, why might not the lady of the most reverend and loyal Primate of all England do the same? Parker was evidently very sore at what he termed these " rebukeful separations." Bishop Cocks of Ely likewise on his own part complained loudly to Archbishop Parker that the " women of the bishops and prebendaries" were by the Queen's Majesty's edict turned out of the colleges and precincts of the cathedrals. He wrote, " forasmuch as it is not needful, but at this time very miserable, and sounding contrary to the ordinance of the Holy Ghost in the Scriptures of God," he hoped that the edict might be with- drawn. He went on to inform his afflicted metropolitan that there was then but " one prebendary dwelling with his family in Ely Church," and "if the wife and children were turned out, the 1)rebendary himself would go." "Turn him out," wrote the bishop plaintively, "doves and owls may dwell there for any ' Parker, in this letter, asserts of the queen that he was " in an horror to hear such words to come from her mild nature and Christianly learned conscience, as she spake concerning God's holy ordinance and institution of matrimony." And again : " To tarry in cathedral churches with such open and rebukeful separations, what modest nature can abide it ? Or tarry where they be discredited. Ilorsekecpers' wives, porters', i)antlers', and butlers' wives may have their cradles going; and honest learned men expulsed with open note, who only keep the hospitality, who only be students and preachers, who only be unfeigned orators in open prayers for the Queen's Majesty's prosperity and contmuance, where others say their back paternosters for her in corners."— Parker to Cecil, Petyt MSS., No. 47, folio 374. HER majesty's HIGH SPH^ITUAL STATE. 57 continual housekeeping. It is miserable that the poor man's family should be turned out, and miserable that such a number of houses should be left desolate." ^ Expressive sentences like this sufficiently set forth the awful havoc which had been made in the garden of God by these "wild boars" of the Reformation. They had indeed rooted up the garden, for, where flowers of grace erewhile grew in abundance, now only sterility and desola- tion reigned. As regards the practical action of those who resisted the innovators, we may learn much from the following interesting and pregnant words : — At the same time, they had mass said secretly in their own houses by those very priests who in church publicly celebrated the spurious liturgy, and sometimes by others who had not defiled themselves with heresy ; yea, and very often in those disastrous times were on one and the same day partakers of the Table of our Lord and of the table of devils ; that is, of the Blessed Eucharist and of the Calvinistic Supper. Yea, what is .still more marvellous and more sad, sometimes the priest saying mass at home, for the sake of those Catholics whom he knew to be desirous of them, carried about him Hosts consecrated according to the rite of the Church, with which he communicated them at the very time in which he was giving to other Catholics more careless about the faith the bread prepared for them according to the heretical rite."- At the same time, Elizabeth maintained her unprecedented dignity. When, for example, the queen visited Canterbury, she was received pontifically, as the Head of the Church of England. On one occasion Parker, supported by the Bishops of Lincoln and Rochester, met her outside the west door. There a "grammarian" made a long-winded oration in her praise, in which the words Ave Eliza ! and numerous exaggerated epithets were used. Then, alighting from her palfrey, she entered the cathedral, where the psalm Deus misereatur and some collects were said. The choir men and boys, with the dean and pre- bendaries, stood in order on either side, and " brought Her Majesty up with a square song, she going under a canopy, borne by four of her temporal knights, to the traverse, placed by the Communion board, where she heard evensong." ■^ 1 Petyt MSS., No. 47, folio 37S, in the Inner Temple. - Continuation of the Hislory by Rev. Edward Ri^hton, B.A., B.N.C. , Oxon. ; edited by David Lewis, M.A. ; p. 267. London, 1877. '■'' This is Parker's own description of the event. See Petyt MSS., No. 47, foHo 22. "The Communion board " is what contemporary writers of the 58 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. In 1560 the Geneva Bible was printed and circulated. Both in its preface and notes the false doctrines of Calvin were studi- ously inculcated ; and these being popular with the now extending Puritan party, it had a considerable circulation, exercising much influence. Some of its notes were obviously directed against prelacy ; while others were so grossly heretical, that, in the then excited state of public opinion, their evil teaching was avowedly feared by the bishops. These superin- tending officials, though much divided both in faith and opinion, were mainly desirous of doing what the queen enjoined upon them, and of subserviently following Her Highness's spiritual directions, however such might change or vary ; yet at the same time feared altogether to offend their foreign allies and puritanical supporters. Archbishop Parker, therefore, arranged that Cran- mer's English version of the Scriptures should be at once revised and reissued — a work which was accomplished about eight years afterwards, and is the foundation of our present English version of the pjible. Early in the year 1563, Parliament met and considered more important measures concerning religion (or irreligion, as some might phrase it) and the New Church. The wheels of the Establishmentarian machine often creaked and groaned, and continually stuck in the progress of ordinary motion ; for the concern being lumbering, unwieldy, ill-planned, and rudely constructed, made extremely little way onwards. To drop a simile. The confusion which reigned when Puritans, Catholics, and State-religionists were in constant and active conflict was steadily increasing. In many places disorders of a gross character were abounding. The laxest doctrines of common morality were proclaimed by the new preachers, who were at once venal and " godly." Vapid and vain sentiments were highly valued, more especially by the foolish persons who uttered them ; while good works, looked upon by some as external tokens of predestined reprobation, seem to have been altogether at a discount. At the same time, these self-constituted prophets pushed themselves and their wares to the forefront ; and in scriptural phraseology, interlarded often with highly scurrilous assertions, condemned all those who would not promote, or abhorred, the new gospel ; proclaiming for such temporal ruin here and ever- lasting misery hereafter. Sometimes, with the solemn deliverance of jjrophecies, they combined the practices of palmistry, necro- old religion termed " tlie Protestant oyster-board," wliich it no doubt greatly resembled. EXTERNAL CHANGES WIDE AND VAST. 59 mancy,! and astrology. Others again, called up, or professed to call up, familiar spirits whom they consulted; or peered into a crystal globe either to watch distant events therein revealed, or to obtain special guidance in seeking for hidden treasures. When it was known that the queen and some of her new nobility consulted such professors, it need not cause surprise that the common people followed their example. By a fanciful study of the armorial bearings granted to some new peer or recently-made knight, some of these necromancers of the new gospel professed to forecast the certain future of those who bore the arms, and to unfold for such the mysteries and marvels of coming years. In the royal coat the proximity of the lilies of France with the lions of England led some of the prophets — why, is not on record — to predict either sudden death or a disagreeable future for the queen ; reports of which reaching Her Highness's ears caused her to fume, fret, and even to swear right royally. Many members of the old and noble families, as well as the "new men," — who had pushed themselves forward, and, because of their greed and rapacity, were not over-popular, — became the subjects of such-like necromantic inspiration. Those who were superstitious, and many of them were this, gravely feared the prophets in question, and trembled when they heard their predicted doom. In alliance with the prophets came the perambulating conjurors who, on a slightly different platform, undertook to prove by ocular demonstration, to the shallow or to those who thought themselves wise, the impossibility of the reality or value of the Sacrament of the Altar ; and who, clothed in disused or imitation sacerdotal vestments, and by the aid of tin cups and thin pellets of bone, on which were engraved repre- sentations of the enemy of souls, or some inferior demon, most ^ A certain William Wycherley practised necromancy, from whose formal depositions the following is taken: — "23rd August. Ite?n, he saith that about ten years past he used a circule called Circulus Salamonis at a place called Pembsam [Qy. Pepplesham], in Sussex, to call up Baro, whom he taketh [to be] an Orientalle or septentrialle spirit. Where was also one Robert Bayly, the scriere of the ciistalle stone; Syr John Anderson, the magiste}- opcralor; Syr John Hickley, and Thomas Goslyng, in the which their practice they had sword, ring, and holly water ; where they were frustrated, for Baro did not appere, nor other vision of spirit, but there was a terrible wind and tempest for the time of the circulation. Per me Wylliam Wycherley. . . . Maier, a preest, and now lay-master of the Mynt at Durham House, hath conjured for treasure and their stolen goods. Sir John Lloyd, a preest that sometime dwelt at Godstone, besides Croydon, hath used it likewise. Thomas Owldring of Yarmouth is a conjuror, and hath very good books of conjuring, and that a great number." — Lansdowne MSS., British Museum, vol. ii. art. 26. 6o THE CHURCH under queen ELIZABETH. profanely caricatured the mass and its manual actions, with utterances of '■'■ MHiiipsiniiis" and '' Sin/ipsiwus," and the still perpetuated phrase of modern conjurors, ^'- Hocus-poaisr^ The work of destroying the ancient faith of a nation is, of course, never so difficult as the work of building it up. Hence, when in the interests of Cecil, Bacon, and Walsingham, the ballad-singers, the self-constituted prophets, and the wandering conjurors were openly allied with the Estahlishmentarian preachers and diocesan superintendents (while the representa- tives of the old system were thumb-screwed, hung, or banished), the work of corruption and destruction, of course, went on apace. But the prophets and conjurors were so personally distasteful to the queen and her Council, having caused them so much annoyance, that in 1563 Parliament promptly passed an Act- against "fond and fantastical prophecies," in which the punish- ments were most severe. Persons convicted of excogitating or spreading prophecies founded on the armorial bearings of any nobleman, knight, or gentleman, or upon the days of the month or year on which they had been born or ennobled, were rendered jjunishable with a year's imjjrisonment and a fine of ten pounds for the first offence ; and to the forfeiture of all their goods and chattels and imprisonment for life for the second. By the same severe enactment, any persons practising " conjurations, enchantments, and witchcraft" were declared felons, and ordered to be punished as such without the benefit of clergy. If, however, the witchcral't was not directed against the life of any one, perpetual imprison- ment was the extremest ]5unishment permitted. But all such measures were impotent to do the work intended. The fiood-gates of impiety, superstition, and disorder had been deliberately opened by those w^ho had assumed power; but it was seen to be no easy task to close them again. As to the bishops of the new sort, they found themselves hampered and hindered on all sides. For not a tenth part of the |)e()])le, even in the towns and cathedral cities, went with the Reformers,'' while scarcely a fifth of those in rural villages and ^ Originally a horri'ole travestie of the divine words of consecration in the Canon of the Mass, '^ Hoc est Corpus Metini." - 5 Elizabeth, c. 15, 16. ■' On January 12th, 1562, in a letter to Cecil, Bishop Home gave a de- plorable account of the Protestant cause at Winchester : " Having many ways endeavored and travailed to bring and reduce the inhaliitants of the City of Winchester to good uniformity in religion, and namely to hive the cures there served, as the Common Prayer might be frequented, which hath not been done sithence the massing-time ; and also that good and sound THE bishops' VISITxVTION ARTICLES. 6 1 hamlets were prepared to accept the new religion. But those who had grasped the whip-handle of authority or might declined to slacken their hold upon it ; while any dutiful return of the nation to faith and obedience was held to be simply out of the question. A study of the " Visitation Articles " and " Injunctions " of the bishops show evidently enough the true state of their dioceses. As to the old churches, most of them had been thoroughly cleared out of all their sacred ornaments.^ Rood- lofts and their crucifixes ^ had been hewn down ; pictures, paint- ings, and banners, looked upon as tokens of " impietic," had followed the vessels of silver and gold. Almost everything, including screens, woodwork, roofs, and walls, had been painfully whitewashed. As to the new ministers, disorder and confusion, irregularities and example of self-will were everywhere apparent, and the bishops could do little or nothing to mend matters. doctrine mic;ht be taught amongst them, which they as yet do not so well like and allow, I could not by any means hitherto bring the same to pass. . . . The said inhabitants are very stubborn, whose reformation would help the greatest part of the shire bent that way, and I would the rather have this brought to pass, for that some of them have boasted and vaunted that do what I can I shall not have my purpose. . . . Sundry there are in the shire, which have borne great countenance in late times, which hinder as much as they can the proceedings in religion." — Original MS. in State Paper Office, A.I). 1562. ^ For example, in John Parkhurst's 'Visitation Articles for the Diocese of Norwich, A. D. 1561, the following inquiry is made of the various church- wardens: — " Whether all aulters, images, holi-water stones, pictures, paint- ings, as of Th'assumption of the Blessed Virgin, of the descending of Christ into the ^'irgin in the fourme of a little boy at Th'annunciaiion of the Aungell, and al other superstitious and dangerous monuments, especiallie paintings and imagies in walle, boke, cope, banner, or els where, of the Blessed Trinitie, or of the Father (of whom there can be no image made), be defaced and removed out of the churche and other places, and are destroyed, and the places wheie such impietie was, so made up as if there had been no suche thing there." And, again, Grindal inquired " Whether in your churches and chappels all aulters be utterly taken down and cleane removed, even unto the foundation ; and the place where they stood paved, and the wall whereunto they joined whited over and made uniform with the rest, so as no breach or rupture appear. And whether your rood-lofts be taken downe, and altered, so that the upper partes thereof with the soller or loft be quite taken down unto the crosse-beame, and that the said beame have some con- venient creast put uppon the same." — Articles to be Enquired of, etc., by Edmond Grindall, Archbishopof York, A.i). 1571. London, William Serres. ■^ In the vestry of St. Anthony's Chapel, Cartwell Fell, was found a wooden figure of our Saviour, part of the ancient rood. It is of oak, has been covered with some composition and then gilded. The arms are gone, the feet, which seem to have been crossed, are burnt off. It has the usual cloth about the loins, and the ribs show distinctly. It is said to have been used to poke the vestry fire. — Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmoreland Antiquarian and Archceologieal Society, vol. ii. p. 39S. 62 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. These poor perplexed officials of the Supreme Governess, not having learnt to obey, were in no case competent to rule. Certain of the principles which they had imbibed abroad were at once heretical and revolutionary ; so no wonder that disorder reigned throughout the land, and that self-pleasing was the lead- ing principle which guided men's minds. When once the principle of " Reform " had been duly and practically admitted, every one had his own nostrum for the existing national sickness ; while no one exactly approved of that change which his neigh- bour had endeavoured to effect or had effected. The " reforms " which the mushroom peers had daringly carried out, and by which they themselves had so considerably benefited in things temporal, were, by other people who wished to try their hands at a like game, voted to be totally inadequate to the grave necessities of the'times; so that fresh and wider changes were by conse- quence ruthlessly inaugurated. Faith and stability had vanished, though sentiment and opinion sometimes secured a hearing amid the disputes of controversialists and the profane and ponderous cant of hysterical preachers. But peace and unity, twin sisters of a divine corporation endued with God's Holy Spirit, had been duly and efficiently banished from the realm. In their place the confusion of Babel and an excruciating discord as of combative demoniacs rose on all sides. Some of these hysterical preachers — "gospellers," as they were now called, or " ministers " (though the fact has too often been ignored) — were mere tinkers ; some were tailors, who believed themselves to be "inspired; others farm labourers, such as ditchers, hedgers, or ploughmen, who thought themselves "called"; a few had probably been admitted, in some mode or another, to the office of Lector or reader ; on which authority, as it appears, they presumed to baptize, to celebrate the Lord's Supper, and to marry couples. Discipline had long been flung to the winds. As such ministers only received a miserable pittance for their " labours in the gospel," and as most of them were married, they took to trading — buying and selling — in order to keep body and soul together, to feed their wives and children, and thus to keep the wolf from the door. The bishops, who were better housed, fed, and paid, did not approve of all this ; but by their lordships' Injunctions and Visitation Articles > condemned the traders ; and though they hated and persecuted " the greased 1 " Whether your minister ordereth the course of his life answerable to his vocation, or useth buying and selling or trading or tinkering or tailoring, or to hedis of Parkhiirst, Bishop of A'or-ccick. London : John Day, 1561. 'Arnoklus Raissius, quoted l^y Austin AUfield in his Answer to Jnstitia Britannica, cap. iii. p. 103. - This word is, of course, here used in its technical and theological sense. The " form " and " matter " of ordination own a special meaning. 64 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. positions, declined to participate in services at which such practices were adopted. For example, Peter Martyr, Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, declared : " As to myself, when I was at Oxford, I would never wear the surplice in the choir, although I was a canon ; and I had my own reasons for doing so." ^ John lewell, — who was never more fitly or aptly described than when the late Richard Hurrell Froude ^ termed him "an irreverent Dissenter," — when writing to this said Protestant Canon of Oxford, remarked that "the scenic apparatus of divine worship is now under agitation ; and those very things which you and I have so often laughed at are now seriously and solemnly enter- tained by certain persons (for we are not consulted) ; as if the Christian religion could not exist without something tawdry."'' It was this person, subsequently made a bishop, who put himself forward, or was put forward by others, to defend by his pen the new National Church which had been set up by Parliament; and a laboured, tortuous, and poor apology and defence he made of it, as the numerous and forcible replies to his treatise sufficiently jjrove. The language of Richard Cocks, Bishop of Ely, still further shows the true character of certain of these miserable innovators: — "We are only constrained," he writes, "to our great distress of mind, to tolerate in our churches the image of the cross, and Him Who was crucified : the Lord must be entreated that this stumbling-block may at length be removed."-* In 1563, Edwin Sandys, then Bishop of Worcester, petitioned the Convocation of Canterbury "to supplicate the Head of the Church," by which he meant the queen, "that all curious singing and playing of the organs may be removed ;" while two other prelates, Grindal and Robert Home, in a letter to their foreign ally, BuUinger, who appears to have been greatly exer- cised in his mind that such eminent English gospellers should appear to tolerate these superstitions, thus plainly declared their private convictions : " We do not assert that the chanting in churches, together with the organ, is to be retained." Nothing of the sort was their real wish. They desired that the prayers, if said at all, should be preached or pronounced to the people ; while, as to popish chanting, they write : " We disapprove of it, as we ought to do."^ This same person, Edmund Sandys, pro- posed in Convocation, "That all saints' feasts and holy days ^ Z/iric/i Lii/crs, 2nd series, No. 14. Parker Society's Publications. - The well-known early Tractarian leader. •* Z.iirich Letters, 1st series, No. 9. Parker Society's Publications. ■* Zurich Letters, 1st series, No. 28. ^ Zurich Letters, 1st series, No. 75. IRRELIGION AND INDIFFERENCE. 65 bearing the name of a creature may, as tending to superstition, . . . be clearly abrogated." ""^ On the other hand, certain of these cringing fanatics and heretical preachers having abolished the chief feasts of the Mother of God — though some of them were restored, for very shame's sake, about a hundred years later — had no scruple whatsoever in profanely making Queen Elizabeth's birthday a new feast of the first importance, equal to those of Christmas or Ascension Day ; of singing invocations of Her Majesty, commencing Ave Eliza ! in St. Paul's Cathedral, instead of the ancient and beautiful Angehis Domini^ or the anti- phons which often followed evensong ; or of placing her portrait and coat-of-arms over the chancel arch of certain churches. The Erastianism and wickedness of such innovations will be now frankly acknowledged by all Christian people.- What they had produced throughout the country may be readily enough gathered from the books and tracts of the day, copies of which can still be studied. Irreligion and indifference, twin giants of evil, stalked unopposed throughout the land. Even some of the highest officials were startled at the sharp and striking results of their own deplorable handiwork, occasionally standing aghast at the existing desolation and demoralisation. They had succeeded in overturning one religion, that which St. Augustine brought from the sacred city of Rome ten centuries before, and hundreds of thousands deplored its overthrow. The\- had set up another, recently made by the queen and Parliament, which the people, knowing its origin and authorship, looked upon both with aversion and contempt. To suppose that the main body of the baptized desired any such change as was effected under Elizabeth is a fond and false notion, without historical sanction, and in the teeth of numerous batches of evidence to the direct contrary. The churches, bare and barn-like, were, in fact, almost deserted.-^ The preachers often addressed only their own families and the whitewashed ^ Wilkins' Concilia, vol. iv. p. 239. - See Wilkins' Concilia, vol. iv. p. 239 ; Edwar.d Rishton's continuation of Sander s History, Book iv. chap. vi. ; a paper by Dr. Rimbault on "Music of the Reformation Period ;" Grindal's Remains, Parker Society's edition, in loco ; and Nichol's Progresses of Queen Elizabeth. At Rycot Chapel, Oxford- shire, there was anciently a portrait of this queen placed exactly over the Communion Table ; but when the adjoining mansion, Rycot House, was pulled down, this picture is said to have been taken to Wytham, near Oxford, the present seat of the Earl of Abingdon. "In St. Peter's Church in y^' East Oxon, on the North Wall, is painted Queen Eliz. lying at full length in her Royal Robes, w"' a Crown on Her Head," etc. — Hearne's Collections, August and September 1706. ■^ "Come into a church on the Sabbath day, and ye shall see but few, K 66 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. walls. The old religion the poor could understand ; but they pardonably preferred the quiet pleasures of the ale-house to the dismal doctrines of John Calvin and the noise of his disciples. Let a writer on behalf of the ancient faith state his position and judgment of what had been done : — " This manner of ministration of sacraments set forth in the Book of Common Prayers was never allowed nor agreed upon by the Universal Church of Christ in any General Council or Sacred Synod ; no, not by the clergy of England at the last Parliament ; but only it was agreed upon by the laity, which have nothing ado with si)iritual matters or causes of religion, but ought to stand to the decrees, judgment, and determination of the clergy in causes of faith and religion."^ Again, let the same writer point out what was the impression in his own day as to the substitution of a table for an altar, and as to the intentional absence — for, to use a modern phrase and jjhantasy, "omission was prohibition " — of any act of consecration in the new and chopped-up Service of the Supper : — " The Catholic Church, which we professed at our baptism to believe [in] and obey, teacheth us to receive Christ's Body con- secrate at Holy Mass with prayers, invocations, and benediction with the sign of the holy cross; and not bare bread and wine without consecration and benediction as is used in this Com- munion, being against the decrees and ordinance of Christ's Catholic Church. Almighty God does command us to separate ourselves from such as take in hand a ministration of sacraments against the ordinance of Christ's Church, and that ye touch nothing pertaining to them, lest ye be lapped in their sin." - These statements are clear enough. The writer honestly urged all his readers not to particii)ate in the heresies^ and though there be a sermon ; but the ale-house is ever full. ... A popish summoner, spy or promoter, will drive more to the church with a word lo hear a Latin mass, than seven preachers will bring in a week's preaching to hear a godly sermon." — Bishop James Pilkington's preface to his Coiniuen- tary on the Prophcl Ai^geus. — ll'orAs, p. 6. Parker Society. London, 1S42. ^ Certain Questions Propounded, etc. London, 1564. ■^ Certain Questions Propounded, etc. Ivondon, 1564. '^ The following is a specimen of the anti-religious poetry of the Elizabethan era : — " O presumptions undertaker, Never cake could make a baker, Yet a Preist would make his Maker. What's become of all ye Christs ye preists h,-ive made? ]Jo those hosts of Hosts abide, or do they fade? One Christ binds, ye rest doe die ; One's a truth, the rests a lie." MS., in quarto, in the library of the Rev. V.. Higgins of Bosbury House, Herefordshire, — the Commonplace Book of the Lady Elizabeth Cope. BISHOP PILKINGTON'S OPINIONS. 67 blasphemy of the innovators. Whatever else such charitable warnings serve to show, they certainly prove that some at least were true to the faith of their forefathers. On the other side, let the varied words of an eminent innovator and Protestant Prince Palatine, Bishop Pilkington of Durham, be studied. He spoke with authority, even the authority of his Supreme Mistress, Queen Elizabeth, whom he obsequiously maintained ^ had rightly all spiritual ])re-eminence, even over patriarchs and popes : — " In the restoring of the gospel many weep when they see not the churches so well decked and furnished as before. The Pope's church hath all things pleasant in it to delight the people withal ; as for the eyes, their God hangs on a rope [/.«?. in the pix or dhormm\ images gilded, painted, carved most finely, copes, chalices, crosses of gold and silver, banners, etc., with relics and altars; for the ears, singing, ringing, and organs piping; for the nose, frankincense sweet ; to wash away sins (as they say), holy water of their own hallowing and making ; priests an infinite sort ; masses, trentals, diriges, and pardons, etc. But where the gospel is preached, they knowing that God is not pleased but only with a pure heart, they are content with an honest place appointed to resort together in, though it were never hallowed by bishop at all ; but have only a pulpit, a preacher to the people, a deacon for the poor, a table for the Communion, with bare walls, or else written with Scriptures, having God's eternal word sounding always amongst them in their sight and ears." ^ Again," as regards the contrast between the Old and the New : — " For when thou comest to Communion with the Papists, and according to St. Paul would 'eat of that bread and drink of that cup,' they will neither give thee bread nor wine according to Christ's institution (for they say the substance is changed, and there remaineth no bread) ; but they will give thee an idol of their own making, which they call their God. They come not ^ " As I noted before, so it is not to be lightly considered, that, where so often the prophet here rehearseth the names of Zerubbabel and Joshua, the two chiefest rulers ; yet he evermore setteth in order the Civil Magistrate and Power before the Chief Priest, to signify the pre-eminence and preferment that he hath in the commonwealth and other matters, more than the Chief Priest (by what name soever he be called), whether it be the pope, arch- bishop, or metropolitan." — Aageus and Abdias, by James Pilkington, chap. i. London: W. Serres, 1562. "^ VA'i\\o^^Y\Wmg\.ox\'s, Aggetis and Abdias. London: W. Serres, 1562. ^ Bishop Pilkington's Exposition upon the Prophets, etc., pp. 171, 172. Parker Society. London, 1S42. 6S THE CHURCH UNDKR QUEEN ELIZABETH. together, according unto Christ's rule, to break the bread : but they creep into a corner, as the Pope teaches them, to sacrifice for the quick and the dead, to sell heaven, to harrow [i.e. to plunder] hell, and sweep purgatory of all such as will pay. They come not to communicate v.ith the people, but to eat up all alone." No words could possibly set forth the actual position of the innovators more exactly and correctly. Yet, it is clear that the people cared not for the recent inventions in religion ; on the contrary, being earnestly and heartily attached to the one true faith, they disliked them. Pilkington, by conseciuence, goes on to grumble because the desecrated and deserted churches were despised and neglected by the populace, as they deserved to be; and to complain of the people because they did not appreciate the alternate preaching and reading, reading and preaching, so wordy, tedious, and uninteresting, of the restless innovators. Then, as now, many affirmed that they themselves could read quite as profitably, if not more so, at home : — " Let us be ashamed, then, of those lewd sayings, ' ^^'hat should I do at the church ? I may not have my beads ; the church is like a waste barn ; there is (sic) no images nor saints to worshi]) and make curtsey unto ; little God-in-the-box is gone (! I) ; there is nothing but a little reading and preaching, that I cannot tell what it means. I had as lief keep me at home.' " ^ About this period, the Bible and the newly-revised Prayer- Book, already altered three times since 1549, were ordered to be translated into Welsh, for use in the Principality of Wales, where the people knew little or nothing of English ; though they could follow well enough, and join in, the ancient Latin services of the Western Church. The Rosary they knew, and the Litany of the Saints, and the Angehis, which they recited three times a day. But these new translations being strange to them effected little good. As we all know, the h'.stablished Churcli in \\'ales has turned out a complete failure. Foes assert it, friends admit it. What religion still remains is of a dissenting type. Englishmen not knowing the language and customs of the Welsh people have been too often appointed to the highest offices in that com- munion. Both deans and bishops have frequently been merely commonplace aliens. So that prelates, rewarded for ])olitical services, or younger sons of impoverished noblemen, have been chiefly distinguished — and it is no mean worldly advantage — for ^ Agi^i'tis and AbJias. London: W. Serres, 1562. STATE OF THE OLD CATHEDRALS. 69 the fruitfulness of their wives, the size of their famihes, the excellence of their wine, and the large sums of money left to their English survivors by testamentary bequests at their un- mourned decease. ^ The cathedrals, until quite lately, had long lain in partial ruin. The snows of winter and the sunshine of sunimer alternately fell on the floors of unroofed chantries and desecrated chapels, where a few chipped and cast-down altars and battered monu- ments, slowly crumbling to decay, told of a worship that had been long ago cast out, and of Catholic families long gone to their rest or become e.xtinct. The cathedral choir — musty in its atmosphere, and gloomy in its aspect, witli no scrap of colour throughout it from floor to roof, except maybe the crimson stair- carpet of its lofty pulpit, or the velvet cushion for the dean's elbows — may have been used as a preaching-place once a week ; and perhaps for the Lord's Supper, travestied by some ministerial sloven, once a quarter. Otherwise it stood only as an impressive monument of a cast-out faith ; and as an actual reminder to the more thoughtful of the impotence of reforms and revolutions to benefit a Christian population. In the chief Welsh towns at the present day, the Establishment can scarcely hold its own; while in the villages too many of the antique barn-like churches, so cold, desolate, and unused, green with damp and rot, and some- times not even paved, are not unfrequently practically empty. In the disastrous principles of reform and change there was obviously no finality. If one set of men might mend, mar, and muddle — why not the restless, the self-seeking, and the revolu- tionary of every succeeding generation ? _ So great was the confusion existing, so perplexing were the discords of controversialists ; while cross-purposes, the sowing of political discord in foreign nations, and an universal upheaving of opinion, popular with self-seekers and reformers, were so common that the wisest were most anxious for the close and consequences of the Council of Trent. Here it may be incidentally, but not inappropriately, noticed, with regard to General Councils, that the sublime doctrines of the Christian religion have been duly developed in a certain historical sequence, parallel to the order in which they are set forth in the Creeds. Thus the true doctrine of the adorable Trinity chiefly occupied the two first (Ecumenical Councils ; the four next — those of Ephesus, Chalcedon, the Second and Third of Constantinople — were engaged in expressing with unerring exactness the faith concerning the Incarnation ; while the first indirect definition regarding the Holy Eucharist was made by yo THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. the seventh (Ecumenical Council, the Second of Niccea. The subjects of grace and of the sacraments in general, of man's free- will and justification, were treated and settled, once for all, by the Council of Trent. Later questions, mainly rationalistic, relating to the true nature of the Church, the office and work of the Holy Ghost, His Divine indwelling, and the infallibility and indefectibility of the kingdom of the world's Redeemer, have been treated more recently. The rationalism of the present day, in which the very existence of God has been denied, and the evils which flow from such rationalism — Erastianism, godless education, and nationalism in religion — are the great subjects which quite recently have been authoritatively condemned. On the 3rd and 4th of December 1563, the last session of the sacred Council of Trent was held. It had been in abeyance for the greater part of the time since its first assembling on the 13th of December 1545. Pope Paul HI. and Pope Julius HI. had in due course guided its decisions and decrees, but during its sessions had passed to their reward. Its work, from beginning to end, was one of true, honest, and legitimate reform. The lawful rulers of the Western Church — duly and painfully con- sidering all heresies, schisms, defects, innovations, and errors, and more especially those modern "reforms" which had become so disastrously current amongst the Northern races — carefully amended whatever needed amendment, and this in no ambiguous terms. Its Catechism, Canons, Decrees, and Confession of Faith remain consequently as monuments of the consummate wisdom of its members, and as certain tokens of the guiding ])resence of the Divine Paraclete, with the Chief Bishop of Christendom, the cardinals and prelates. The close of the Council was impressive indeed. First, all things that had been duly done for the progress of Holy Church and the benefit of the faithful were solemnly confirmed by those ]:)resent in the presence of the Blessed and Adorable Sacrament. To the then Pontiff, Pius IV., the members of the Council wished many years and eternal memory. Peace from the Lord God, everlasting glory and eternal happiness in the sight of the vSaints, were asked for on behalf of the two departed Popes who had reigned during the Council's previous sessions. For the Emperors Charles V. and Ferdinand, and for all Christian kings, " ijreservers of the right faith," the members of the Council prayed God to bestow many years of life. Prayers went up to the Almighty, likewise, for the legates, the cardinals, and the bishops. The faith of the Church, as newly explained, was confessed by all, and promises openly made to keep the Council's CLOSE OF THE COUNCIL OF TRENT. 7 1 Decrees. " We all thus believe," they affirmed. " We all think the very same thing; we all, consenting and embracing both Creed and Decrees, voluntarily subscribe thereto. This/' they went on to declare, " is the faith of blessed Peter and of the Apostles ; this is the faith of our fathers, this we believe, this we hold, to this we adhibit our names." Then the Cardinal of Lorraine, arising uncovered, declared as follows : — " Adhering to these Decrees, may we be rendered worthy of the grace and mercy of the first and Great High Priest, Jesus Christ, Our Lord and God ; Our Immaculate Lady, the Holy Mother of God, and all the Saints interceding for us." " Amen ; so be it ! " was the unanimous and universal response. " To all heretics," continued His Eminence, " be anathema." " Amen ! " was the like hearty and unanimous answer. Then, after having sung Te Deun:^ the members dispersed. Such was the Council's impressive and solemn close. In England what had been effected was at once seen to be of the gravest and greatest importance. Independent of the dis- cussions concerning doctrines, the very practical point of occasional conformity with the new religion and worship, which certain Englishmen had followed, was fearlessly dealt with ; while those who had occasionally frequented the churches were distinctly forbidden to do so any longer. Immediately this decision was formally proclaimed, a change came over those who clung to the ancient faith. Reports of the terms in which the decision had been given reached England in due course, some months before the formal decree. An authority hitherto recognised by all the Christian nations of the West, the Chief Bishop of the Church of God, now spoke. His words were reverently listened to; the old law of Christianity, newly applied, was at once dutifully heard and duly obeyed. Much suffering followed upon obedience ; but it sanctified the sufferers, and abundantly blessed them all, during the anxious and trying time of their earthly probation. CHAPTER III. This decision of the Council of Trent, as will soon be discovered, exercised great and direct influence on the course of events in England. But these must not be forestalled. The exact point and purport of that decision were not publicly made known by the issue of any formal document; but the duty of those who retained the old faith soon became perfectly well understood. Hence, more completely and generally than ever, the churches in England, and especially the more remote and village churches, became deserted. ^ This fact is on record again and again in the writings of the Fathers of the so-called "Reformation." The new prelates deplored the emptiness of the sacred edifices in writing to each other. Some of them, furthermore, grumblingly romphined to Sir William Cecil ; but if the existing fines for absence and for non-participation in the new "rites of the Supper ■' would not aid in filling the desecrated sanctuaries, that statesman, as he responded, was unable as yet to suggest any more efficient practical remedy. The bishops should more ])ainfully and piously give themselves to preaching and prayer, 'l^hey .should be "less with your women and children, and more with your flocks," - as an anonymous writer forcibly remarked. The division, therefore, between the ancient Catholics and the upholders of the new religion became still further marked and manifest; while the State authorities thus confessed themselves impotent either to bridge over the newly-made chasm, or to pre- vent fiirther rents and fissures being deliberately made by those standing on its brink. Ere we pass on to the deeds of later years, it is necessary to deal here with a few particular events and positions of some importance. 1 In some of the towns, pre-arranged theological controversies and squabbles over the meaning of Scripture enlivened the ordinary dulness, when bull or badger baiting was out of season. - "A A/i'i/t'sl Cure, together with a Cry from the Wilderness, etc., jip. 35, 36. London, 1566. CONP^USION AND DISORDER IN PUBLIC WORSHIP. ^ ^ The state of ecclesiastical affairs, about the year 1564, more especially the frightful confusion everywhere practically existing, and in some places rampant, is sufficiently proved from a record still remaining in Sir William Cecil's own handwriting.^ It was evidently made after due and careful inquiry on the part of that influential State official. As regards the performance of divine service and the administration of those sacraments which were retained, — Cecil's own expressive sentences are scarcely altered in what is about to be reproduced, and, where altered, only paraphrased in what follows : — Some of the ministers say the service and prayers in the chancel, others in the body of the church. Some say the same in a seat made in the church, others in the pulpit, with their faces to the people. Some keep precisely the order of the new Prayer - Book, others introduce metrical psalms ; some use a surplice at prayers, while others minister in their secular and ordinary attire — hat, doublet, and hose. As regards the position of the Communion Table, in certain places it stands in the body of the church, in others in the choir. Within the latter it is sometimes placed altar-wise about a yard from the east wall ; in other cases it stands in the midst of the chancel, north and south. In a few places it consists of a table duly constructed in joiner's work, in others it is a mere rough board placed upon common trestles. By some of the new ministers it is covered with a carpet or an old vestment ; by others the bare oak table is intentionally left perfectly exposed and uncovered. In the actual administration of the Communion, ordered to take place once a month, some of the cathedral clergy and the Queen's chaplains ministered the ordinance in a surplice with a cope over it; others were clad in a surplice only; others, again, with no official dress of any sort or kind. Uniformity was thus out of the question, as those discovered, who, with unbridled self- pleasing and licence, having altered the ancient services to suit their own tastes and opinions, found it exceedingly hard to induce others to adopt exactly the same standard of ecclesiastical taste, though prescribed by injunction or proclamation. So it was, likewise, as regards details. Some used an ancient chalice and paten at the table, others a Communion cup of the new sort, others a common cup. The bread, either leavened or un- leavened, was received by some kneeling, by others standing, by some walking round the table,- by others sitting, by many with ' See vol. iii., No. 7, of the Lansdowne MSS. in the British Museum. " "They used to begin with three or four sermons, preached one after the other. They then went to Communion, not receiving it either on their knees 74 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. their heads covered. All thus pleased themselves, while discord reigned. Again : at baptism some ministers administered the sacrament at the font, others in a basin ; some with a surplice, others without ; some drew the sign of the cross on the child's brow, others, with an honest shudder at the very notion, deliberately omitted it as the acknowledged " mark of the Apocalyptic Beast." This new religion, so eminently selfish, which Cecil and Elizabeth had set up, had given point to the well-known foreign Protestant maxim "every one for himself, and God for us all." The poor, therefore (now so haggard and famishing), whom the Divine Author of Christianity had declared that His followers should always have with them, were voted an eyesore and a nuisance. AVhen, consequently, the queen, in her royal pro- gresses, passed through different districts of this once-favoured land, she could not fail to observe the miserable condition of the lean and famishing peasantry, who came out from their hovels to stare sullenly at her as she was borne along on her velvet-dressed litter. Ill-fed, half-clothed, lantern-jawed, and wolf-like, with scarcely any rights left, with no protectors against tyranny from above or grinding cruelty from below (for the new nobles and the local constables equally oppressed them), those few who were old enough to remember a former state of things may have been pardoned if they felt disposed to curse the day upon which they had been born. During the whole of her reign, in truth, the state of the lower classes was appallingly sad, and their destitution deplorable. The monasteries having been already destroyed, or put to secular purposes, and their ample revenues given away to worthless adventurers as bribes ; and these revenues too often lost, squandered, and dissipated by those who had by law sacrileg- iously taken possession of such sacred possessions and their corresponding treasures, — the country poor suffered severely. Often no moral consideration could induce the new owners of the monastic estates to aid in relieving or maintaining the indigent and aged people, who bore in patience their poverty and woes. No doubt such estates were grievously impoverished, and pro- duced but little ; for, as a rule (the times being times of change), they were neither cultivated so well, nor looked after so carefully, as when the monks owned only a life interest in them. Too often the new secular proprietors — men of low birth and breeding — were tyrants, oppressive usurers, cold-hearted, and godless. or standing, but moving by, so that it might be called a Passover in very truth." — Life of W'illiavi ll'estou, p. 241. Lundon, 1S75. THE queen's visit TO CAMBRIDGE. 75 Our Divine Redeemer, as all Christians know, has left here upon earth the poor, the unfortunate, and the miserable — a beautiful necessity — to become objects of the love and care of those who have received temporal blessings and the riches of this world. Like a refreshing shower during sunshine, He has caused to descend upon them a double portion of His divine charity — the graces of Calvary and the glories of Tabor. Withdrawing Himself awhile during man's time of probation, He has thus bequeathed the poverty-stricken to us. They are at once His liveliest image and His best-loved inheritance. But under Queen Elizabeth they were neglected, despised, and passed by. For faith was cold and charity was not. On the occasion of the queen's visit to Cambridge, she went in State, on a Sunday morning in August 1564, to King's College Chapel, to hear a Latin sermon by Dr. Perne, prefaced by the new Bidding-Prayer. Prior to this, the Litany in English was sung, during which she entered with a combination of regal and pontifical splendour. Four Doctors of Divinity carried a canopy of cloth of gold over the Supreme Governess — the same canopy which, in the fourth year of her sister's reign, had been borne over the Blessed Sacrament by four knights in the same chapel ; and she was attended by her ladies-in-waiting and high officers of State, — some of whom carried those external symbols of Her Highness's spiritual and ecclesiastical authority which she had assumed, and desired never should be wanting on such occasions. The queen approved of the sermon; and "liked the singing of the choir so well," that she attended evensong in the afternoon, on which occasion some lyrical verses in her honour, parodying one of the ancient antiphons of Our Lady with which the Sunday Vespers had been formerly concluded, were sung. It had been arranged that one of the plays of Plautus — the "Aularia" — should be represented in the hall of King's College on Sunday evening; but as the space of that refectory was limited, and there was not sufficient room to erect a suitable state-throne and canopy for the queen, Her Majesty gave orders that a stage should be put up and that the play should be acted in the chapel, which was done, and the performance was not concluded until midnight. The queen was so pleased with the acting, but more particularly with the good looks, of a handsome youth who had very cleverly personified Dido, that on that sultry autumn midnight she at once sent for him to her apartments at King's College, "to speak to him and to commend him to his face ; " and, when she left the university, graciously bestowed an annual benefaction of twenty pounds per annum for lile upon 76 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. this favoured and lucky performer.' It will thus be seen that the revived taste for pagan literature had at this time become so rampant, as that a chapel dedicated to the solemn worship of God the I'rinity was, by royal command, thus deliberately I)rofaned. By the queen's numerous love affairs — for she was always in love, ever making plans for matrimony — she contrived to render herself the scandal of England and the laughing-stock of the European Courts. Details of her personal behaviour when her favourites were concerned, often so unwomanly and disgusting, of her coarse words and questionable sayings, were, in open letters or by occult cypher, transmitted by the clever ambassadors from abroad to their various royal and imperial masters ; who were thus kept well and truly informed of what was actually going on, and who, on reading them, grinned over such records of her amorous antics. The first of her lovers was a knight of a respectable family. Sir A\'illiam Pickering, of whom John Jewell informed P3ullinger that he was "both a prudent and pious man." Sir William had been sent on a mission to one of the petty princes of Germany, and on his return the queen, suddenly smitten, heaped such favours on him, and paid him such unusual attention, both at ])roper and improper times, that the courtiers quite believed that a marriage would (or at all events, after what had happened, that it should) take place. Pickering was undoubtedly hand- some, with a fine brow, regular features, and small hands and feet ; his address, moreover, was courtly, his tastes were refined. Whether, on discovering the amatory peculiarities of the Supreme Governess, and her expectations, he became both alarmed and disgusted, or not, may never be accurately known. Anyhow, the affair all at once collapsed — no one knew why or wherefore — and this as suddenly as it had been initiated. Her next lover was Henry, Earl of Arundel, K.G., born in 1512, at heart a staunch supporter of the ancient faith, a brave soldier,- and one who on several occasions had done good service to the State. In Edward VI. 's reign he had been unjustly ^ The authorities at Cambridge seem to have been exceedingly annoyed, if not greatly disgusted, at her parsimony and favouritism. On leaving, she simply thanked them for their hospitality, and gave some of the Heads oi Houses her right hand to kiss. A " Copie of verses" then penned and printed, — commenting on her gift to the youthful actor, and hinting tliat the said gift was a reward for cjuestionable favours, — too coarse to transcribe, is pre- served there. - He had distinguished himself greatly by his bravery at the siege of Boulo 'ne. THE queen's favourites. yj and heavily fined upon frivolous pretences; but his noblest achievement was to have peaceably secured the throne to the late pious and religious Queen Mary. He it was who proclaimed her in the city and then rode down to Suffolk to receive her commands and serve her faithfully. But this unhappy nobleman, in order to please the new queen, had voted in the House of Lords, against the convictions of his conscience, in favour of the so-called "Reformation" and the new laws, and kept up an appearance of maintaining it. A member of the old nobility, for he was the eighteenth earl of his house and name, he was munificent and even regal in his choice offerings and rich gifts to his sovereign, often entertaining her with masques, banquets, and balls. In fact, his vast fortune had proved wholly inadequate to pay for the expenses thus incurred, and he greatly impoverished his estates by so doing. At length, irritated by the queen's behaviour, he haughtily returned his staff of office as Lord Steward, with some over-plain and too homely words of warning and expostulation. Later on, however, he opposed the Couit party (disliking the queen's projected marriage with the Duke of Anjou), and, being by them feared, was soonpersecuted. When he could no longer minister to the queen's amusement, evinced independence, and was growing old and gouty,i she speedily turned her attention to younger and livelier favourites ; and not only treated the earl with contempt, but with great harshness. He died in 1580.- The person who made the deepest impression on her heart was a worthless fellow of neither family nor blood, Lord Robert Dudley. He, with his father the Duke of Northumberland, the low-born son of the rapacious usurer of Henry VHL's reign, had been attainted for the attempt to remove both Mary and EHzabeth from the succession to the Crown. But he had recently been restored in blood, received several official appointments and grants, and met with great favour from the queen herself.-^ He 1 In 1565 be went to try the effects of the baths at Padua for relief from the gout in his feet, but with no great success. "He had been made her tool in politics and her sport in secret," writes Miss Strickland. - " In him," wrote Camden, " was extinct the surname of this most noble family, which had flourished with great honour for three hundred years and more ; from the time of Richard Fitz-alan, who, being descended from the Albinis, ancient Earls of Arundel and Sussex, in the reign of Edward I. received the title of earl without any creation, in regard of his bein'i- possessed of the castle and honour of Arundel." ^ In the fifth year of her reign she granted Robert Dudley the castle and manor of Kenilworth and Astel Grove, the lordships and manors of Denbigh and Chirk, with other lands and possessions, together with a special licence for transporting cloth, which he disposed of to John Mark and others, 78 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. was appointed Master of the Horse, with a fee of one hundred marks a year, and, to the astonishment both of the peers and the pubUc, made a Knight of the Garter, and soon afterwards Constable of Windsor Castle. On September 29th, 1563, he was created Baron of Denbigh and Earl of Leicester. This took place with great state at Westminster, as Sir James Melville, who was present, has left on record. The queen, in her chair of state, personally invested Robert Dudley with the new robes of his dignities as he knelt before her. During the trying process, many eyes being upon him, he bore himself with due gravity and discretion ; for several peers, officers of State, and foreign ambassadors were present. Before the new peer arose, however, the amorous queen had the execrable taste to tickle him in the neck underneath his linen shirt, at which he crimsoned deeply ; and afterwards, with smirks and smiles of satisfaction, to ask JNIelville, the Scotch ambassador, what he thought of the earl's person and bearing.^ Elizabeth had evidently pressed a marriage between Mary, (2ueen of Scots, and Lord Leicester, in order that when the former refused him, as was sure to be the case, the way might be more easily opened for the completion of her own matrimonial arrangements with the new nobleman. Should Mary accept him, which was highly improbable, it would not be difficult for Elizabeth to bring the proposal to nought, and then secure the man for herself. There was at one time a coolness between the queen and Leicester, which the latter cleverly turned to his own account, and made use of in the following manner. Holding that a temporary absence might serve his purpose, and whet Her Highness's appetite for his return and company, he resolved to ask to be sent to France on some diplomatic mission, and in- duced De Toys, the French ambassador, to make this request in person of the queen. On hearing it she flew into a passion, swore her usual impressive oath, and at once ordered Leicester into her presence to offer some explanation of his unexpected desire. The earl came in due course, when she immediately asked him if it were possible that he truly wished to go to France. " I merchant adventurers. — See The Sidney Papers, in loco, and the grant of the peerage for life to Alice Dudley (wife of Sir Robert Dudley, son of the Earl of Leicester), as Duchess of Dudley, by King Charles L • A very fine miniature of this nobleman, from the pencil of Isaa.c Oliver (1556-16 1 7), is in the possession of the Duke of Ruccleuch, K.G. It is inscribed with the name of Leicester and with the date of his death, 15SS. LORD LEICESTER AND THE SPANISH AMBASSADOR. 79 will have it," she said, "from thine own lips, if so it be." He replied, with unusual calmness, " With your Highness's permis- sion and favour, it is one of the several things I most desire." The queen was so nettled by this quiet response that she told him, with bitterness, that it would be no great honour to send a groom (this was a sarcastic allusion to his office of Master of the Horse) to so great and puissant a prince as the French king. He is said to have been made intensely indignant by this studied insult, and to have changed colour greatly. But he kept his temper, and wisely restrained his speech. When he had retired from her presence, which he did at once, she laughingly observed to the ambassador — " I cannot live, believe me, I cannot live without a sight of that man daily. He is like my lap-dog. When that is seen running forward, they who see it say that I, his mistress, am nigh. And so it is. Where my Lord of Leicester is, there too am I : there, good De Foys, must I be likewise." Soon afterwards fresh warmth, not to write heat, took the place of the temporary coolness which had existed between the queen and her favourite ; while, as a consequence of their be- coming inseparable companions, once more the case, fresh scandalous reports were current at home, while abroad it was openly asserted that they lived in adulterous intercourse.^ On one occasion Elizabeth had condescended to discuss these reports with Quadra, the Spanish ambassador. In so doing, the poor lady surely forgot both her dignity as a queen and her delicacy as a woman, in personally and argumentatively pointing out the a priori improbability of what was asserted by her enemies, by a joint inspection of her own and her favourite's sleeping-chambers, and their due geographical relation to each other. This unpleasant incident, which, it is to be feared, altogether failed of its purpose, was discussed by some of the other ambassadors, and, as usual, also talked about abroad. Subsequently the queen, finding that her favourite's health was likely to suffer from the alleged dampness of the room in which he had hitherto slept, had the daring indelicacy to assign him a chamber in close proximity to the royal sleeping apart- ment.^ The boldness of this act quite astonished some of the ^ A gentleman in Norfolk was put upon his trial for having asserted that "my Lord of Leicester had two children by the queen," and for this plain- speaking was compelled to lose both his ears or else to pay a fine of ^100. — See Lodge vol, ii. p. 47. - Testimony of Quadra, Bishop of Aquila, in original despatches at Simancas. 8o THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. more refined amongst the courtiers ; while certain of the old nobility, though silent, shook their heads gravely at the mention of it. But no one publicly criticised or protested. Fortune in this, as in other cases, favoured the brave. Elizabeth, in these amorous contrivances, was truly as brave as she was bold, and, it may be added, as daring as she was indelicate and un- blushing. But more of this hereafter. Almost to the day of her death she was always seeking for the admiration of the other sex. As she grew in years, so she grew in vanity, selfishness, and cruelty — cruelty such as in a woman the world has seldom been called upon to contemplate and turn from in aversion. Her treatment of the venerable Archbishop of York, 1 )r. Nicholas Heath, for example, was simply inhuman and scandal- ous. She had been deeply indebted to him, seven years previously, at a sore crisis in her life, the death of her half-sister Queen Mary, but seems to have speedily enough forgotten her obligation. He it was who, when her title to the throne was so doubtful, served by boldness and prompt action to establish her questionable position ; for, like an apt statesman and loyal subject, he secured the sanction of both Houses of Parliament to the proclamation by which her reign was peacefully and duly inaugurated. Yet because, being "a Churchman of the true ancient sort," he was conscientiously unable to accept the ridi- culous figment of her so-called "supremacy," and, as in duty bound, resisted, both in the Houses of Lords and Convocation, the imposition of such a fraudulent novelty upon Englishmen, by every lawful means at hand, she had the archbishop privately conveyed to the Tower, without charge or trial, and there for five weary years confined in a dark and unwholesome dungeon, to his great sorrow and pain. When in ordinary conversation the Venetian Ambassador so properly put before the queen the strong judgment entertained abroad of such unjustifiable acts of persecution and ini(]uity, — for, as he remarked in regard to the imprisoned archbisho|), "no man in a civilised State should be condemned to punish- ment without a hearing," — she enjoined that Archbishop Heath was to be "less straitened." At that time, Thomas Young, an intruder, neither canonically elected nor duly confirmed, had usurped the place and revenues of the ancient archiepiscopal See, legally belonging to Heath, and was doing his best to serve the cause of Cecil and the innovators in a loyal and beautiful county — the people of which were almost unanimously in favour of the ancient faith. Heath was, therefore, permitted to retire to the VESTIMENTARY INNOVATIONS. 8 1 Manor House in York,^ formerly the residence of the Abbot of St. Mary's and subsequently one of the official houses of the See in question ; and, though kept under a close watch, was allowed to walk abroad within a certain distance of his place of confine- ment. But even this moderate liberty was looked upon by some with dislike and jealousy. The suspicions regarding this vener- able prelate were, however, suspicions and nothing more ; possibly the consequence of malice, or probably of mere gossip. In the meantime Lord Scrope r applied to the Council for advice and directions in the case of the archbishop's suspected peregrinations. The question was discussed, in the queen's presence, on the 22nd of June 1565, with the assistance of the Lord Keeper Bacon, the ]\Larquis of Northampton, the Earl of Leicester, Air. Secretary Cecil, Mr. Cave, Mr. Petre, and Mr. Sackville ; when it was determined that Lord Scrope should deal sharply and promptly with the old man of eighty, "to the end that he should declare the full truth why he wandereth abroad, and if he will not be plain in his declaration," — the queen, just turned thirty years of age, goes on to have " fully determined " and recorded on the Council Register that he must be tortured, pinched, or thumb- screwed, — " to use some kind of torture to him, so as to be without any great bodily hurt, and to advertise his (Lord Scrope's) doings herein," ^ are the exact words of the Privy Council Order. About this time, i.e. 1566, another controversy arose, not from maintainers of the old order of affairs, but from certain of the more advanced innovators. And it arose as follows : — For the new bishops a lawn rochet and black chimere, with silk scarf, and neckband of sable or other furs, was customarily adopted or enjoined to be worn. In existing pictures of them they are thus represented.* This was the ancient domestic dress ^ Canon Raine of York thus most courteously writes to me: — "If the place is described as ' the Manor House in York,' it is the large building formerly the residence of the Abbot of St. Mary's and now the Yorkshire School for the Blind. It was generally called 'the Manor House' or ' ihe King's Manor,' as the Stuart kings resided there." ■' This was Henry, ninth Lord Scrope of Bolton, K.G., summoned to Parliament from 21st October 1555 to 4th of February 1589. In the filth year of Queen Elizabeth he was appointed Governor of the Castle of Carlisle and Warden of the West Marches. He married, first, Eleanor, daughter of Edward, Lord North, by whom he had an only daughter ; and, secondly, the Lady Margaret Howard, sister of the Duke of Norfolk, by whom he had an only son Thomas, who became tenth Lord Scrope. ^ See, for the documents and authorities relating to this act of iniquitous cruelty. Memorials of the Hoivards, edited by Mr. Howard of Corby Castle. ^ See a contemporary portrait of Matthew Parker in the dining-liall of Lambeth Palace. 82 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. of a Western Catholic prelate — not a dress for public ministra- tions, but for hall or study — which he always used in private. But as it seemed to mark off the chief superintendents from ordinary ministers, it gave great offence to the latter and their followers, more especially when these were violent Calvinists or rampant Zwinglians. Equality in the House of God was what was wanted by the innovators, with a complete banishment of all external signs, symbols, or " vestures of superstition," as they were termed. Anything more than the ordinary dress of the preachers was consequently held in horror. The same was the case with the use of the surplice and silken hood enjoined upon the inferior clergy, h'rorn the outset the foreign Protestants had rudely characterised the surplice as "the whore of Babylon's chemise," "the Romish ragge," " Antichrist's shyrte," and by other equally choice terms. As early as 1550, however, John Hooper, an apostate Cistercian monk, who had been duly infected with the heresies of Geneva, had firmly refused to wear any such vestments, and had carried on a furious and angry controversy with Dr. Nicholas Ridley against them ; while Miles Coverdale, a rough Yorkshireman, who had once been an Augustinian friar, but repudiated the faith and had become tirst a Lutheran and subsequently a (.'alvinistic heretic, was heartily at-one with Hooper in his practice ; and was even obstinately vigorous and foul-mouthed in his anti-vestment frenzy. The extravagant violence of this old man's language, glanced at now, only raises a smile or a sincere feeling of pity. This controversy, which obviously covered theological differ- ences of a true and deep nature, grew rapidly in fierceness and fury.i The anti-vestment agitators i)leaded for a " pure and ])lain" service, which, judging from contem])orary statements on the subject, it might not unreasonably be presumed, from their own standing-i)oint, they had already secured — for the churches had been largely emptied of their ornaments, wrecked of all that was valuable, and whitewashed. Still the innovators declined to ' To add a few details as to facts : — The Puritans objected to the pre- eminence and authority of the bishops, and the jurisdiction of the episcopal courts. They disliked the repetition of the Lord's Prayer, as savouring of vain repetitions on popish beads ; they would not use the versicles and responses, which were, they maintained, loo much like the "ancient idolatrie." The reading of the A])ocrypha, the sign of the cross in baptism, the ring in marriage, and the terms of the marriage-contract were equally distasteful. Chanting the psalms, the use of organs or musical instruments, and more especially the enjoined dresses of the clergy, were all signs or marks of the Beast. Enactments concerning divine service. s^ attend any worship where surpHce, rochet, or hood appeared on the backs of the ministers; and expressed this their settled determination in scurrilous pamphlets and the most violent speeches, as well as in action. Many of these tractates were printed at private presses, some had been prepared abroad, others were issued without any publisher's name, so that no one could be held responsible for what they contained. All of them were wildly anti-episcopal, and full of abuse of the new Protestant bishops, who were characterised as "turncoats," "anti-gospellers," and "traitors." The Master and Wardens of the Stationers' Company consequently were formally enjoined to search for and seize all such works. Their authors were to be dealt with by the arbitrary Court of High Commission, which, managing by a side-wind to make laws as they seemed to be required, came down upon all Puritan offenders with sledge- hammer force. The recent "reforms" were asserted to be at once "godly" and "sufficient"; anything further was ruthlessly condemned. Furthermore, any book-dealer selling a copy of the offensive pamphlets in question was to be fined twenty shillings for each offence. The printer was to be imprisoned, while both printer and bookseller was each henceforward forbidden to follow his respective calling on any plea, at any time, in any case, or under any circumstances. These tyrannical and contemptible enactments — which came fresh from the soiled hands of the daring rebels who, without any authority, had pretended to "reform" the Church of God, and which enactments, it may be remarked, were quite worthy of their authors — utterly failed of their purpose. The Puritans continued to read, write, and publish most violent and obnoxious tractates ; and, as a party, soon became distasteful, and a source of grave danger, to the Government. These energetic persons who on principle, however false, objected to the "prelatial" and "popish" character of the new religion, soon secured for themselves the title of "Noncon- formists." According to their consciences (or what may have done duty for the same) they could not and would not adhere to the system recently set up. They deliberately dissented from it ; they could not conform to it, even though enjoined thereto by so high an authority as the Queen's Highness herself. Of course, it was quite reasonable that any of the preaching-ministers who adopted this policy should retire from work in the new state organisation or religious institution — leave the pulpit and close the Book of Homilies. But this was not enough. Her Majesty's advisers went much further in their dealings with these unhappy 84 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. people.^ All Englishmen, as the teachhig then stood, must acknowledge the Queen's Supreme Headship, and worship exactly as she worshipped, bow when she bowed, pray as she prayed, sing as she sang, and in no other way. The ponderous preach- ments and dreary services of Geneva, which some miserable fanatics, stricken with self-delusion, looked upon as the highest types of evangelical purity, were consequently as much forbidden as the Hereford or Salisbury rite for Holy Mass. The so-called "prophesyings" of the Puritans were quite as odious to the queen as the Catholic Sacraments of Confirmation and Extreme Unction, the Rosary or the Angelus. Such a practical policy scarcely befitted those who so loudly condemned the proceedings of the previous reign. And this point was more than once ably but unavailingly pressed upon the queen by some of the oflicial representatives of foreign Courts. Yet, let the truth be told, it was only by persecution, fines, imprisonment, and the gallows that the new system of nationalism in religion could be main- tained at all. About this time an ecclesiastical case of great importance — of such importance indeed as that special legislation immediately took place because of it — was heard in the secular courts. Robert Home, Bishop of Winchester, a Puritan gentleman of some zeal, indicted Dr. Bonner, the de jure but not dc facto Bishop of London (for FMmund Grindal by royal authority had usurped that important position), for refusing to take the recent ( )aih of Supremacy. PJonner had been for years a close prisoner in the Marshalsea, and this place of confinement was in the diocese of Winchester. The plea which Bonner put in was a ])lain and bold one, viz. that Home, falsely calling himself ■' Bishop of Winchester," had never been duly, regularly, and legally consecrated according to the laws of the Church of England ; and consequently that he could not be, and was not, bishop (if the diocese in which Bonner was confined, and there- fore had no legal authority whatsoever to tender him the oath in question. It was a bold move on the part of the closely- imprisoned and ill-treated ])rclate ; but, being founded on fact and law, turned out to be a due, proper, and valid plea. The judges who heard the case were much annoyed and sorely ' In June of the year 15(17 a congregation of more than a hundred Puritans was surprised and seized at I'lumbcrs' Hall, in the city of London, of which tifieen were marched ofT to prison without either charge, trial, or condemna- tion. After they had thus been treated they were examined by Grindal, the Bishop of London, who rated them fiercely, but failed to secure their conformity. THE CASE OF BONNER AGAINST IIORNE. 85 puzzled by the position into which Bonner, a learned canonist, had thus so adroitly placed Home. They resolved, therefore, to give no decision whatsoever ; for otherwise it must have been clearly and unquestionably against Home, and in favour of Bonner. So the proceedings were most irregularly and unjustly stayed and quashed. Bonner was sent back to the unhealthy ceils of the Marshalsea. Home did not venture to tender him the oath again ; while the result of this lawsuit sorely vexed and dis- mayed the new prelates, and annoyed the Queen's Council greatly. Throughout the whole country the issue of this suit gradually became known, and it was largely discussed. It had effectually served to test the question whether the new bishops and ministers were "true and lawful" or not. The old clergy, who compared the novel form of ordination with the old, looked upon the New Church officers with both suspicion and aversion, the more vigorous amongst them with contempt. They were unnoticed by the rich and learned,^ and despised by the poor and un- lettered ; so much so indeed that the Supreme Governess had to invoke the aid of Parliament to fill up what was so obviously wanting, and to strengthen that which was so notoriously weak. An Act of Parliament was therefore passed declaring that the method of making and consecrating the archbishops and bishops of this realm, notwithstanding all objections, was "good, lawful, and perfect." The tedious terminology and numerous redundancies of expression in the Act are remarkable; but inasmuch as, under the circumstances, such was obviously the only method available for settling, once for all, the various disputes ^ which had arisen on the subject, it is necessary to put a part of it, at all events, on record. Its preamble asserted that " divers questions by overmuch boldness of speech and talk of the common sort of people, being unlearned, having lately grown," concerning the new kind of ordinations, whether the same be done according to law or not, " which is much tending to the slander of all the state of the clergy"; therefore, for avoiding such slanderous speech and for enabling Parliament to settle the question, this Act is passed. ' Grindal, when Archbishop of York, writing from Cawood to Cecil, on August 29, 1570, tells him plaintively that he has not been well received ; the greater part of the gentlemen of the county being not well affected towards godly religion, and among the common people many superstitious practices remain. — Domestic State Papers, Elizabeth, vol. Ixxiii. p. 390. " The writers who during Elizabeth's reign dealt with this subject, and who had occasioned such "various disputes," were Harpesfield, Hoskins, Sander, Harding, Stapleton, Allen, Reynolds, and others— all of whom, it should be remembered, were English Churchmen vigorously resisting the innovators. 86 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. No reference is made to any rites older tlian those of King Henry's reign, and whatever has been or is wanting is duly supplied " by the authority of Parliament " — of course, a high authority in things temporal, but nothing more. Parliament, of course, can compass many deeds and effect much, but it is utterly powerless to make either a priest or a bishop, and no declaration, resolution, or statute can render valid and certain any ordination or consecration already invalid or doubtful. The most important part of the new enactment is now verbally quoted : — "And further, for the avoiding of all ambiguities and ques- tions that might be objected against the lawful confirmations, investings, and consecrations of the said archbishops and bishops, Her Highness, in her Letters Patent, under the Great Seal of England, directed to any archbishop, bishop, or others, for con- firming, investing, and consecrating of any person elected to the office or dignity of any archbishop or bishop, hath not only used such words and sentences as were accustomed to be used by the said late King Henry, and King Edward, Her Majesty's father, and brother, in their like Letters Patents, made for such causes, but also hath used, and put in Her Majesty's said Letters Patents divers other general words and sentences, whereby Her Highness. by her supreme power and authority, hath dispensed with all causes or doubts of any imperfections, or disability, that can or may in anywise be objected against the same, as by Her Majesty's said Letters Patents remaining of record more plainly will appear ; so that to all those that will well consider of the effect and true intent of the said laws and statutes, and of the supreme and absolute authority of the Queen's Highness, and which she, by Her INLajesty's said Letters Patents, hath used, and put in use, in and about the making and consecrating of the said archbishojis and bishops, it is, and may be, very evident and apparent that no cause of scruple, ambiguity, or doubt can or may justly be objected against the said elections, confirmations, or consecra- tions, or any other material thing meet to be used, or had, in or about the same ; but that everything requisite and material for that purpose hath been made and done as precisely, and with as great a care and diligence, or rather more, as ever the like was done before Her Majesty's time, as the records of Her Majesty's said father's and brother's time, and also of her own time, will more jjlainly testify and declare. "Wherefore, for the ])lain declaration of all the premises, and to the intent that the same may the better be known to every of the Queen's Majesty's subjects, whereby such evil speech, as NEW ENACTMENT CONCERNING THE NEW ORDERS. 8/ heretofore hath been used against the high state of prelacy, may hereafter cease, be it now declared and enacted, by the authority of this present Parliament, that the said act and statute made in the first year of our said sovereign lady, the Queen's Majesty, whereby the said Book of Common Prayer, and the administra- tion of sacraments, with other rites and ceremonies, is authorised and allowed to be used, shall stand and remain good and perfect, to all intents and purposes ; and that such order and form for the consecrating of archbishops and bishops, and for the making of priests, deacons, and ministers, as was set forth in the time of the late King Edward VI., and added to the said Book of Common Prayer, and authorised by Parliament in the fifth and sixth years of the said late king, shall stand, and be in full force and effect, and shall, from henceforth, be used and observed in all places within this realm, and other the Queen's Majesty's dominions and countries : " And that all acts and things heretofore had, made, or done, by any person or persons, in or about any consecrations, con- firmation, or investing of any person or persons elected to the office or dignity of any archbishop or bishop within this realm, or within any other the Queen's Majesty's dominions or countries, by virtue of the Queen's Majesty's Letters Patents or commissions, since the beginning of her reign, be, and shall be, by authority of this present Parliament, declared, judged, and deemed, at and from every of the several times of the doing thereof, good and perfect, to all respects and purposes, any matter or thing that can or may be objected to the contrary thereof, in any wise, notwithstanding : "And that all persons that have been, or shall be, made, ordered, or consecrated archbishops, bishops, priests, ministers of God's Holy Word and Sacraments, or deacons, after the form and order prescribed in the said order and form how archbisliops, bishops, priests, deacons, and ministers should be consecrated, made, and ordered, be in very deed, and also by authority hereof declared and enacted to be, and shall be, archbishops, bishops, priests, ministers, and deacons, and rightly made, ordained, and consecrated ; any statute, law, canon, or other thing to the contrary notwithstanding." Some may say that the deed done, or pretended to be done, by this wordy and unprecedented Act, was, in truth, a large stretch of the new supremacy. But surely the same national authority which had created that power could equally define its limits, supply its existing deficiencies, and furthermore extend its operation. 88 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. The queen herself, however, did not in the least believe, though officially she was bound to do so, in her so-called " supremacy." She was not so theoretically uninstructed in the Christian religion as to conceive for a moment that a woman could either own or exercise such spiritual power, or that any other warrant for her having assumed such a title as Supreme Governess could be found beyond the bare yet bold decree of the English Parliament. She more than once distinctly admitted as much.i To Lausac, an envoy from France, sent hither on certaui special business, she frankly owned her sure conviction that the supremacy of the Church of England, and indeed of the whole family of God, did not belong to her, but to the successor of St. Peter ; but she apologeticafly added that circumstances had created a breach with the Pope, and that the English Parliament and people, having resolved to make a new Church for them- selves, she was thus obliged to assume and exercise the office of Supreme Governess of it ; in which, for the sake both of con- venience and necessity, she was officially compelled to feign her belief. At the same time that much persecution was being carried on against two parties — the anti-innovating and the non-conform- ing — certain foreign princes endeavoured so to influence the (jueen that she might be induced to repudiate the wicked and dangerous policy of her advisers, more especially this newly- invented si)iritual supremacy. The Emperor Ferdinand, in a holograph letter, implored Her JSIajesty not to forsake the religious fellowship of all the Christian princes of Europe, or of a long line of illustrious Catholic ancestors at home ; nor to set her own fallible opinion, and that of the " new men of yester- day" — themselves so notoriously unsettled and changeable — in opposition to, and above that of, the Universal Church of our Redeemer, the Church of fifteen centuries and more. He also entreated her to refrain from imprisoning and persecuting the suffering remnant of true Catholic prelates, whose only fault was that they were loyal and faithful to the almost universal religion of Christendom and its chief bishop. Moreover, His Majesty suggested that, for those of her subjects whom no fines could ' This can be seen on record from a perusal of An J>is7cer to Sir EcncaiJ Cokes Reports (p. 365), the author of which also points out that Lord Montagu and the Earl of Southampton had heard similar expressions of the queen's mind. So, too, had the Duke of Ecria, who, after talking with the (pieen on the inherent absurdity of a woman ruling a Church, wrote to his master, King Philip, to inform him that she did not in her innermost heart believe in any such notion, but only look the title and office because Cecil and Bacon had assured her of the urgent necessity of so doing. DR., AFTERWARDS CARDINAL, ALLEN. 89 make apostates, no bribes serve to pervert, and no persecution alter, some few desecrated and empty churches here and there might be given up for the ancient rites and reh'gion as heretofore.^ But these wise and timely proposals fell upon a heart that was being alternately excited by the lusts of the flesh and chilled by the pride of life, and upon a conscience dulled to the voice both of truth and of justice. Nothing whatsoever was gained by the emperor's well-intended and charitable letter. Affairs steadily and surely went from bad to worse. For practical action the ancient Church of England men were at this time led by a very able and remarkable ecclesiastical statesman, — a leader of experience, learning, and prudence, — who rendered good service to their cause. William Allen, a Lanca- shire man, educated at Oxford, Fellow of Oriel in due course, and for some years the Principal of St. ]Mary's Hall in that university, had ever set his face as a rock against the innovators and their innovations. On the death of Queen Mary he had withdrawn to Louvaine, but on his return to England, about this period, became foremost in condemning any participation what- soever in the mutilated rites or public services of the new religion. 2 All true Catholics, he asserted, were absolutely bound to abstain from taking any part in the worship set up by Act of Parliament,^ and patiently to suffer the consequences of non- compliance. Since the decision at Trent, no controversy on the subject could even be entertained. This was Dr. Allen's opinion, stated with lucidity and frankness ; and it was largely followed. When, therefore, this pious and learned Churchman (afterwards Cardinal Allen) defended the position of those who sought a remedy for the existing spiritual desolation in England by the establishment of a theological college abroad, he thus beautifully and powerfully wrote, describing the situation exactly :• — " The universal lack, then, of the sovereign sacrifice and sacraments catholicly ministered, without which the soul of man dieth, as the body doth without corporal food ; this constraint 1 The queen had already given up the Church of the Austin Friars and the crypt of Canterbury Cathedral to certain foreign heretics ; while the nave of the Abbey of Glastonbury had been actually turned into a workshop for Protestant weavers from Flanders. " It seems a little doubtful when Dr. Allen was in England. Possibly he may have come over for awhile with Dr. Morton and others to consult the old bishops and the ancient Catholic nobility on his proposition, and soon gone abroad again. ^ "In Lancashire," as Richard Barnes, Bishop of Carlisle, wrote to Cecil, " the people fall from religion, revolt to Popeiy, and refuse to come to church." — Carlisle, October 27, 1570, Domestic State Papers, Elizabeth, vol. Ixxiv. p. 395. 90 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. to the contrary services, whereby men ])erish everlastingly ; this intolerable oath, repugnant to God, the Church, Her Majesty's honour, and all men's consciences; and the daily dangers, disgraces, vexations, fears, imprisonments, impoverishments, de- spites, which they must suffer ; and the railings and blasphemies against God's sacraments, saints, ministers, and all holies, which they are forced to hear in our country, are the only causes, most dear sirs, or (if we may be so bold, and if Our Lord permit this declaration to come to Her Majesty's reading) Most Gracious Sovereign, why so many of us are departed out of our natural country, and do absent ourselves so long from that place, where we had our being, birth, and bringing-up, through God ; and which we desire to serve with all the offices of our life and death, only craving correspondence of the same, as true and natural children of their parents."^ In the year 1569, it seemed to many of those who still re- mained faithful to the old religion, that, as a consequence of the action of the Fathers of Trent, they were being verily driven to desperation by the cruel severity of the penal enactments ; by the gross persecution which, over and above the law, was notoriously connived at and tolerated ; and by their own utter inability, as mere isolated units, to defend themselves, to stem the tide of social ruin, or to oppose the policy of those who were in authority. Amongst the new ministers, controversy and squabbles appeared interminable.^ The old clergy had either been silenced or compelled to adopt the new religion, its regula- tions and worship. Numbers of the most learned who had refused to do so — dignitaries of the highest rank — had been de- prived, imprisoned, or sent abroad. Many more, the very Hower of the learned clergy, had become voluntary exiles. Protests and expostulations to the harsh makers of cruel laws were use- less. Such had been made in abundance, in various forms and shapes, by various persons ; but, as already pointed out, were always made in vain. For nobody heeded them. Obedience to the new laws was carefully exacted from all. The dictates of ^ Apoljgie and True Declaration of the Institution of the Eni;lish Colleges, etc., pp. 12, 13. -"Our people (the innovators and so-called 'Reformers') are carried away with every wind of doctrine. If you know what their l)elief is to-day, you cannot tell what it will be to-morrow. Is there one article of religion in which these communities, which are at war with the Pope, agree together? If you run over ail the articles, from the first to the last, you will not find one which is not iield by some of them to be an article of faith, and rejected by others as an impiety." — " Letter of Uudith to Capitonius," amongst the Epistolc£ Bezie. RISING IN THE NORTHERN COUNTIES. QI conscience, like the ancient faith and its rites, were laughed to scorn. Men who clung to the old religion were harassed to death by persecution, fines, and imprisonment. The many sores in the body politic were deliberately and carefully kept open. Rich and poor, ignorant and learned, alike suffered. So deep was the feeling of irritation in the Northern Counties that, under the guidance of the Earls of Northumberland and Westmore- land, the people eventually rose as one man to throw off the unbearable burdens by which they were being thus oppressed. Her Majesty, it was maintained, was surrounded " by divers new set-upp nobles, who not only go about to overthrow and put downe the ancient nobilite of the realme, but also have misused the Queue's Majestie's own personne,^ and also have by the space of twelve years nowe past sett upp and mayntained a new- found religion and heresie contrarie to God's Word."- In York- shire, Durham, and Northumberland, there had long been a stir amongst all classes. Dr. Nicholas Morton, sometime a Prebendary of York, who had gone to Rome for counsel and advice, came back again with the rank and office of Apostolical Penitentiary ; in order to bestow afresh upon the ancient clergy who so dehberately rejected the innovations, those special faculties required, and that needful jurisdiction desired, which so many believed to have lapsed altogether. He was a near relation of the old Yorkshire families of Markenfeld and Norton, owned considerable influence, and had long done his best to band together the leading representatives of the ancient nobility in resistmg the innovators. He received sympathy and support from the families of Dacres, Ratcliffe, Swinbourne, and Tempest — names to be had in renown. During the summer and autumn he visited these and other families at their pleasant homes, where his welcome was hearty and sincere ; and pointed out plainly the only practical remedy for discord and disunion. His words were acceptable. But when he treated of passive obedience, his advice was not taken by all. Some were for action rather than words. Words and expostulations were useless. Strength must now be met by strength : the brute force of unbelief and revolu- tion by the chivalry of faith and self-sacrifice. As Sir Ralph Sadler was careful to inform the Court, there were not at that time "in all this country ten gentlemen that do favor and allow of Her Majesty's proceedings in the cause of 1 This was evidently a direct allusion to Robert Dudley, who elsewhere was characterised, with regard to his relations with the queen, in terms which cannot be decently quoted. - Author's excerpts and MSS. 92 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. religion. "1 When forced by fine and confiscation to attend the now dreary services and dreadtul sermons of the new Calvinistic rehgionists — in which damnation was sternly dealt out to all doubters of their own and their partisans' election — and this entirely against their consciences, they were only the more exasperated by such enforced attendance, and made the more discontented. On this point sentiment, both amongst rich and poor, was almost unanimous. The Countess of Westmoreland, and several members of the ]Markenfeld and Norton- families were for open and active resistance. Some asserted that Dr. Allen favoured this policy. In the middle of November, there- fore, the banners of another Pilgrimage of Grace were unfurled, and many prayers went up to heaven for success and victory. At Durham, which was immediately occupied by the armed retainers of the two earls. High Mass was once more celebrated in the cathedral, in the ])resence of several thousand earnest and excited worshippers. Whittingham, the i^seudo-dean,^^ who had never received any ordination whatsoever by a bishop, and there- fore was a mere layman, with a great show of practical wisdom, took himself out of harm's way with more than convenient speed. In the cathedral the " tressells of bordes " for the Lord's Supper were ignominiously kicked out of the choir and broken into splinters ; the English Bible and the Zwinglian Service-Books were enthusiastically torn into fragments. Nobody desired that the Word of God should be doctored by mistranslations, omissions, and false human glosses. A portable altar was set up at the east end of the deep choir, flanked by velvet hangings ; and a processional crucifix with taper-bearers on either side was uplifted once again at the head of the procession in that sacred sanctuary. The old vestments were brought out from the sacristy ; the wax tapers were once more lit ; a chalice and ciborium of precious metal, with a York missal, were sought out anew and used ; while the voices of those who sang the Gloria in excelsis. Credo, Sanctus, and Benedidiis of the sacred mass — an united crowd, which filled the Norman nave from northern side to southern, and from the sanctuary steps to the western Galilee — rose grandly like the sound of many waters. From Durham the "Pilgrims of Grace" marched southwards, in strict order and with some confidence, issuing appeals to the 1 Sir Ralph Sadler's StaU Papers, vol. ii. j). 55. ' See Pedigree of " Norlon alias Conyers," pp. 244, etc., of T/ie Visitation of Yorkshire, edited by Joseph Foster. London, 1875. ^ William Whittingham, a layman, inNtalled October 8th, 1563, died lOlh June 1579. STRONG ACTION ENSUING THEREUPON. 93 afflicted populace westward and eastward to rise in defence of the religion of their forefathers. The watchwords, " God, Our Lady, and the Catholic Faith," were passed from lip to lip, and from village to village. Bells from the church towers welcomed the Pilgrims with merry peals. The old clergy came out of their retreats and seclusion to offer a silent prayer for success, or to bestow a coveted blessing, as the army with banners passed down the northern lanes. The innovators, on the other hand, cowardly and terrified, offered no resistance. Some few stared with astonishment, but did nothing more. At Darlington and Stain- drop the mass was restored amidst the acclamations and thanks- giving of thousands. People, congratulating each other, flocked in from the villages around to worship and rejoice. The banner of our Divine Redeemer, representing His blessed Passion and sacred wounds was upborne by an old esquire, Richard Norton, whose Christian character and high social position had, for manv years, secured the respect and aftection of the populace. At Richmond and at Ripon the Pilgrims were also welcomed and strengthened, and there likewise the old rites were restored : so that the Court, on learning from Sir Ralph Sadler of what was taking place, became thoroughly alarmed ; while the Supreme Coverness, after her impressive but unhallowed custom, swore like an excited fishwife. But the royal plans in opposition to this movement had been well made. The Earl of Warwick was steadily advancing north- wards with twelve thousand soldiers. Lord Hunsdon, likewise, was on the march thither. Troops under the command of the Earl of Sussex, who had made York his headquarters, soon after- wards came up to and faced the Pilgrims. Amongst these, spies and agents had already misreported the advance of many other forces of the Crown ; so that the insurgents, losing heart, and being divided in counsels, ill-fed and dispirited, at length dis- persed and fled. The Earl of ^V'estmore]and succeeded in making his escape to Flanders ; but the Earl of Northumberland, crossing the Scottish border, was soon confined as a prisoner by the Regent Murray in Lochleven Castle. INIany of the northern gentry also escaped to Scotland, and obtained protection from the heads of the southern clans. At home the work of vengeance, which more than rivalled the cruelties of William the Conqueror, began with no delay. Martial law was everywhere proclaimed. Of the nobility and gentlefolk there were no less than fifty-seven persons promptly attainted of treason. The legal machinery speedily did its work. Their confiscated lands, goods, and chattels served both to pay 94 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. the expenses of the royal troops and to reward those who had condescended to do the queen's dreadful work at the same time. No less than three hundred villages w-ere at once wasted with fire and sword. People who had heard mass, as well as priests who had said mass, were specially singled out for severity. Any one who confessed to having carried a cross, worn a surplice, or borne a banner stood self-convicted of treason, and was decreed to be "strung up" without mercy or delay. An old widow woman named Alice ^^'ilkinson, who had been seen to use her beads and pray for Esquire Norton and the Pilgrims, found her cottage in flames over her head, and herself homeless and penni- less, as a fitting punishment. Most persons will think this too severe. Moreover, homesteads and farm produce in general were ruthlessly burnt, and cottages destroyed ; while in every town and village the gibbets were hung with the carcases of those who had been killed. Many were turned out to die in the cold of a severe winter. Sir William Cecil had personally given strict orders that the chief inhabitants of each township should be at once summoned before the soldiery, and compelled by imprison- ment or starvation — if need be " by lack of food " was his exact phrase — to disclose the names of those of their neighbours who had joined in the rebellion. Lord Sussex, naturally harsh, appears, in doing this, to have shown no mercy whatsoever. Three hundred people, in the county palatine of Durham, at once suffered death; but, in writing to Cecil, on the 28th of December, the Earl of Sussex informs him that the number ot those hung was at present uncertain ; but " I guess," he continues, " that it will not be under six or seven hundred at the least that shall be executed of the common sort, besides the prisoners taken in the field," who appear to have been at once cruelly butchered in cold blood. Subsequent to this. Lord Sussex, using again a favourite and expressive Elizabethan phrase, ordered eighty to be "strung up" without benefit of clergy — that is, unconfessed, unabsolved, and uncommunicated — at Durham, forty-one at Darlington, twenty at Barnard Castle, and no less than one hundred and seventy-two in the other towns and villages of that county. To each and all, religious consolations were peremptorily refused. The poor creatures were forced to die without either prayers, houseling, or unction. Numbers more were imprisoned, half-starved, tortured in various modes, beaten, hung up by the wrists to a beam, and otherwise grossly maltreated ; but several of those who survived were subsequently pardoned, on the sole and express condition that they took the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy. Those who declined to CRUEI-TIES INFLICTED ON THOSE WHO HAD RISEN. 95 allow that the queen was Supreme Governess of the Church were compelled to linger on for years, and finally to rot and die in prison. During the perpetration of these Nero-like atrocities, it appears that even the stern Lord Sussex was not sufficiently prompt in his harshness, nor savage in his cruelty, to satisfy the require- ments of his most religious and gracious queen. What he had done was good and politic as far as it went, she intimated ; but Her Sacred Majesty was evidently anxious to hear of the perpetration of yet further and greater severities.^ " The Queen's Majesty," as he informed his lieutenants, " doth much marvel that the executions are not yet ended, and she disburdened of the charges which are considered for that respect ; wherefore I pray you heartily to use expedition [in torturing, starving, and hang- ing], for I fear this lingering will breed displeasure to us both." -^ The stern calamities which befell the old nobility of the north and their faithful retainers, on this and on other occasions, are not forgotten even at the present day. Their chivalric deeds of unselfish daring, having inspired some of the most musical ballad writers of former days, when they penned their touching songs ; noble aspirations and lofty thoughts being thus scattered like good seed, which bore good fruit for many an after generation. Through times of moral darkness and heresy, in the esquire's hall, and round the cottage hearth, of the Northern Counties, — the land of the Percies, the Nortons, and the Nevilles, — touching records of faithfulness to conscience, fidelity to God, and of noble self-sacrifice were, with tearful eye and faltering voice, told to those who came after, — by which for generations many a sancti- fied heart was silently edified, and many a strong arm nerved for the doing of good and great deeds. Early in the spring of the year 1570, the saintly and self- denying ^ Pontiff, Pope Pius V., at last issued his solemn Bull of Excommunication against Queen Elizabeth. Some assert that ' See RIe/noriah of the N'ortherJt Rebellion, by Sir Cuthbert Sharp, from which interesting and valuable compilation the main facts of the text have been thankfully taken. - Later on, it appears that even Lord Sussex was thoroughly weary of his bloody work and brutal butcheries ; for he wrote complainingly to Cecil : " I was first a lieutenant ; I was after little better than a marshal ; I had then nothing left to me but hanging matters." For further evidence regarding the putting down of this rebellion, the original letters of Sir George Bowes, quoted by Sir Cuthbert Sharp, furnish most reliable but melancholy information. ■* " Pius v.," wrote Lord Macaulay, "under his gorgeous vestments, wore day and night the hair-shirt of a simple friar ; walked barefoot in the streets at the head of procesbions ; found, in the midst of his most pressing avoca- 96 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. the absence of any authority from Rome to defend their righteous cause by force of arms had powerfully influenced several of the old nobility in their action with reference to the recent IMlgrimage of Grace, and induced them to desist altogether from active co-operation with those who, as a last resort, had been driven to take up arms in defence of God, the Church, and their country. Henceforth such a doubt could not exist. The terms of the Bull are luminous, concise, and full of vigour. \\'arnings from one who certainly had the right to make them, the Chief Bishop of Christendom, had remained unnoticed ; friendly expostulations were wholly unheeded ; his patience had been taken undue advantage of ; it was now the obvious duty of the Father of the Faithful to act. Of the world's Redeemer and King it had been foretold bv David, long previously to the Incarnation—" He shall call Me, Thou art My Father, My God and My strong salvation : and I will make Him My first-born, higher than the kings of the earth. My mercy will I keep for Him for evermore ; ancf My covenant shall stand fast with Him. . . . But if His children forsake My law, and walk not in My judgment ; if they break My statutes and keep not My commandments, I will visit their offences with the rod and their sin with scourges." ^ The divine and eternal kingdom, thus prophesied of, then existed. Christ ruled everywhere by delegation. Parish priest, bishop. metroi)olitan, archbishop, and patriarch, each and all, in due order and subordination, and with their legitimate authority acknowledged, in their degree represented our ascended Lord. But the Bishop of the See of St. Peter represented Him in one eminent and special manner, claiming jurisdiction over the whole family of God. Most confused and inexact notions exist regarding this jurisdiction of the Roman Pontiff. All that was claimed for him w-as an acknowledgment that, as Chief Bishoj) of Christendom, he had everywhere authority to reform and redress heresies, errors, and abuses within the Church, which was not confined to any place or nation, but was Catholic or Universal. Furthermore, so as to avoid discord and disputes, and to preserve the visible and actual unity of the Episcopate, it l)clon"-ed to the Holy Father to confirm the election of bishops and to approve of and sanction their institution. He also lions, time for private prayer ; often regretted that the public duties of his station were unfavourable to growth in holiness ; and edified his flock by innumerable instances of humility, charity, and forgiveness of injuries; while at the same time he upheld the .authority of his See with all the stubbornness and vehemence of llildebrand."— Essays, Ranke's History of the Popes, in loco. 1 Psalm Ixxxix. 26 32. PIUS V. AGAINST ELIZABETH. 97 claimed to grant to the clergy licences of non-residence, and permission to hold more than one benefice with cure of souls, as also to dispense by act and deed with the canonical impediments to matrimony ; and, finally, he received appeals from the highest spiritual courts throughout the whole Christian world. In Eng- land the lawful successor of him who had sent St. Austin to Kent, and by whose authority he had placed his chair as arch- bishop at Canterbury, by whose own graces and miracles the beautiful tree of the Church had taken root downward, and borne fruit upward, — now so weightily spoke, not with the stutter- ing accents of usurping and pitiful heretics, but with the due and delegated authority of the First-born of the Most Highest. Here follows an English version of this important Latin instrument : — "Sentence declaratory of our Sovereign Lord, the Pope Pius v., against Elizabeth, pretended Queen of England, and the heretics who abet her, whereby all subjects are declared released from the Oath of Allegiance, and every other bond, and those who hereafter shall obey her, are bound by the bond of anathema. "Pius, Bishop, servant of the servants of God, in memorial of the matter. "The sovereign jurisdiction of the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church (outside of which there is no salvation), has been given by Him, unto Whom all power in heaven and on earth is given, the King Who reigns on high, to but one person on the face of the earth, even to Peter, Prince of the Apostles, and to the successor of Peter, the Bishop of Rome. Him He has set up over all nations, and over all kingdoms, to root up and destroy, to waste and to scatter, to plant and to build; to the end that he may maintain in the unity of the spirit the faithful people bound together by the bond of charity, and present them unto Him their Saviour perfect and without loss. "In the discharge of this duty, We, whom God of His good- ness has called to the Government of His Church, shrink from no labour, striving with all Our might to preserve in their integrity that very unity and the Catholic religion which are now assailed by so many storms, by His permission from Whom they come, for Our correction, and for the trial of the faith of His children. But the wicked are so many, and are growing so strong, that there is no part of the world which they have not attempted to corrupt by their evil doctrines : among others labouring for this end is the servant of iniquity Elizabeth, the pretended Queen of England, with whom, as in a safe refuge, the worst of these men have found a secure retreat. G 98 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. "Tills woman having taken possession of the kingdom, un- naturally claims for herself the place, the great authority and jurisdiction of the sovereign head of the Church throughout all England, and has involved in miserable ruin that kingdom so lately recovered to the Catholic faith and piety. " She has forbidden by the strong hand of power the observ- ance of the true religion, overturned by the apostate Henry VIII., and by the help of the Holy See restored by Mary, the lawful (jueen, of illustrious memory. She has followed after and accepted the errors of heretics. She has driven the English nobles out of the Royal Council, and filled their places with obscure heretics. She has been the ruin of those who profess the Catholic faith, and has brought back again the wicked ])reachers and ministers of impieties. She has done away with the Sacrifice of the Mass, the Divine Office, fasting, the distinction of meats, celibacy, and the Catholic rites. She has ordered the use of books, containing manifest heresy, throughout the realm, and the observance by her subjects of impious mysteries and ordinances, according to the rule of Calvin, accepted and practised by herself. "She has dared to take away their churches and benefices from the bishoixs, the parish priests, and other Catholic ecclesi- astics, and has given them with other ecclesiastical goods to heretics. She has made herself a judge in ecclesiastical causes. She has forbidden the prelates, clergy, and people to acknow- ledge the Church of Rome, or to obey its mandates and the Catholic constitutions. She has compelled many to take an oath to observe her wicked laws, to renounce the authority of the Roman Pontiff, to refuse to obey him, and to accept her as the sole ruler in temporal and spiritual matters. She has decreed pains and penalties against those who do not submit to her, and has inflicted them upon those who continue in the unity of the faith and obedience. "She has thrown Catholic prelates and parish priests into prison, where many, worn out by sorrows and their protracted sufferings, have ended their days in misery. " All this being notorious and known unto all nations, and so confirmed by very many grave witnesses, as to leave no room for ])alliation, defence, or concealment, sin being added to sin, and iniquity to iniquity, the persecution of the faithful, and the ruin of religion daily growing more and more at the suggestion and under the direction of Elizabeth aforesaid, whose will is so obstinate and whose heart is so hardened that she has set at nought not only the charitable prayers and counsels of Catholic CONTINUATION OF THE POPE'S LETTER. 99 princes entreating her to return to a better mind and be con- verted, but also Our own, by her refusal to allow the Nuncios of the Holy See to enter the realm. We, having recourse, by necessity compelled, to the weapons of justice, are unable to control Our grief that We must proceed against one whose pre- decessors have rendered signal services to Christendom. " Relying, then, on His authority Who has placed Us on this sovereign throne of justice, though unequal to the bearing of so great a burden, We declare, in the fulness of the Apostolic power, the aforesaid Elizabeth a heretic, and an encourager of heretics, together with those who abet her, under the sentence of exxommunication, cut off from the unity of the Body of Christ. " Moreover, We declare that she has forfeited her pretended title to the aforesaid kingdom, to all and every right, dignity, and privilege ; We also declare that the nobles, the subjects, and the people of the kingdom aforesaid, who have taken any oath to her, are for ever released from that oath, and from every obliga- tion of allegiance, fealty, and obedience, as We now by these Letters release them, and deprive the said Elizabeth of her pretended right to the throne, and every other right whatsoever aforesaid : We command all and singular the nobles, the people subject to her, and others aforesaid, never to venture to obey her monitions, mandates, and laws. " If any shall contravene this Our decree, We bind them with the same bond of anathema. " Seeing that it would be a work of too much difficulty to send these Letters to every place where it is necessary to send them, Our will is that a copy thereof by a public notary, sealed with the seal of an ecclesiastical prelate, or with the seal of his court, shall have the same force in courts of law and everywhere throughout the world that these Letters themselves have if they be produced and shown. " Given at St. Peter's, in Rome, in the year of the Incarnation of our Lord One thousand five hundred and sixty-nine, on the fifth of the calends of March, ^ in the fifth year of Our Pontificate. "C^. Glorierius. " H. CUMYN." What resulted from this instrument will be apparent from the events of later years, to be recorded and commented upon in due course. In the spring of the year 15 71, there was a severe, sharp, and ^ February 27, 1570, according to the present computation. Anciently the year began on the 25th of March. lOO THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. carefully-organised raid upon the beggars. In the north the distress, of course, was most severe. Hundreds in the past winter had died of starvation. Poverty, even then, as may be noted, was a sin for which, by order of the autocratic authorities, there was to be no absolution and no forgiveness. Charity was dead. Selfishness reigned.^ The poor and miserable were hate- ful to look upon and expensive to feed. The old were far too long-lived. Somehow or another they must be put out of the way, or confined to their miserable habitations. When the queen took her journeys through the country, therefore, the lean, the famished, the wolf-like, and the repulsive-looking were now, by special Privy Council order, to be carefully kept out of her royal sight; for she disliked their aspect and dreaded their cries of hunger. Thirty years ago and more, the monasteries had all been destroyed, and with them had been lost any adequate realisation of the duty of practising the corporal works of mercy ; for good deeds were regarded by the new gospellers as " filthy rags." Most of the older monks and friars had found their only rest in death. But of the younger who had been professed, some still lived ; a few had passively accepted the new state of affairs ; while many of the lay brothers had no doubt become mendicants — reasonably dissatisfied with having lost their only homes, and having no apparent chance of obtaining work in the present, and less hope of being able to keep body and soul together in the future. These antl such as these, their name was "legion," seemed to fill the land — for field after field remained until led ; acre after acre now lay fallow — they infested the towns and villages, the wild bye-ways and out-of-the-way hamlets, asking alms of esquire and yeoman, hind and peasant, at the portal of the hall and at the thatched porch of the cottage ; living often during autumn on wild fruit, uncooked roots, and during winter upon the barley- bread of alms. In the frost and cold they frequently herded with 1 As Bishop Sandys himself wrote: — "But we are fallen into these evil times, wherein iniquity aboundeth, and charity waxeth cold. Hearty love is turned into hearty hatred : our hands are bloody, and our hearts malicious. He liveth not that loveth his neighbour as himself. If we did love our neighbours as ourselves, we would not oppress them with extortion and usury : we would not undermine them, and wring them in bargaining : we would not so proudly contemn them, so spitefully envy them, so impudently slander them, or so greedily practise for their infamy and discredit : we would not speak them fair, and mind them evil : fawn on them, and betray them ; seek our credit by their reproach, our gain by tlieir loss : when we see their necessities, we would relieve and succour them, bind up their wounds with the good Samaritan, and charitably provide for them." — Sandys' IVoil's, pp. 206, 207. Parker Society. London, 1842. THE POOR, WANDERERS AND OUTCASTS. lOI the cattle at night, or in summer went to rest under hedges and trees. With no apparent means of subsistence, and always practically witnessing against the success of the new religion, — for they constantly deplored the destruction of the religious houses, — and often, when lingering near village cross or way- side hostel, in language frequently bold and sometimes possibly seditious, they forcibly contrasted the past with the present, to the grave disparagement of the latter, and to the annoyance of the powers that were. Such dangerous wanderers, therefore, as the Privy Council determined,^ must now be everywhere persecuted; hunted from pillar to post ; examined by justices of the peace to find out if they used the rosary or sympathised with the old religion ; flogged on their naked backs, without regard either to age or sex, for being poor and having no home ; put into the stocks on a starvation allowance for several days ; whipped afresh when they were taken out, until the purple wale -marks on their shoulders became bloody wounds, from which the gore trickled downwards to the earth ; while sometimes the poor creatures, being so weak with want of food, and feeble and shrunken because of their poverty, suddenly sunk senseless towards the ground, straining the cords round their wrists, and so were literally flogged to death. It was an awful sight and a horrible ; worthy of the reign of a woman falsely called "glorious" and "good," — a sight to have made angels weep and Englishmen shudder and sicken ; and a national sin well meriting all the various and heavy punishments which one after another descended, sixty years afterwards, upon our distracted nation, during those fearful twenty winters and more of the miseries of the Great Rebellion and the dire slaughter of the Civil War. ^ It was required by the Privy Council that " certificates of all the vaga- bonds, rogues, and mighty valiant beggars, men and women," who had been "examined, whipped, stocked, and punished according to law," should be duly made out and sent up. — Domestic State Papers, Elizabeth, vol. Ixxx. , August 20, 1571. In Gloucestershire, William Wynter, justice of the peace, and others, have made search for vagabonds, but have found none but such poor beggarly persons as are not thought fit to trouble their lordships with. — August 27, 1 57 1. At Aylesford, on August 28, the justices of Kent apprehended "thirteen men and women, stout and valiant vagabonds, all of whom have been stocked and whipped severely." — Vol. Ixxx. At Thame, in Oxfordshire, some "proper stoute al;)bey-men " were convicted and punished as vagabonds. Of these it is stated that on September 8th, 1571, "they took their stocking and whipping verie ill. So they were sore bloodied, and one thereafter died, no long whUe thereupon." — Author's MSS., from Churchwardens' and Parish Accounts of Thame. CHAPTER IV. The two events recently recorded, viz. the formal condemnation of the queen by Pope Pius V., and the strong determination to persecute even unto death, and so extirpate, those of the English poor who still adhered to the old religion, by taking care that all obstinate persons of that class could be summarily and easily dealt with and disposed of by the new laws, effectively cleared the way for the queen's advisers, and enabled them to act with still greater decision than they had hitherto shown. The recent enactment against beggars would enable the authorities to worry, starve, brand with a hot iron, flog and put in the stocks and pillory, any persons of the lower or migratory class supposed to be dangerous. The possession of a string of prayer- beads, a crucifix, an Agmts Bet, or any foreign book of devotions, served to secure for the poverty-stricken possessor of it, the title ot " Italianate atheist." ^ A poor, friendless man who was found saying his prayers on a rosary, at the steps of a wayside cross, was held to be a certain ally of the Pope and a possible assassin of the queen. As regards the Bull of Pius V., Cecil and Walsingham could never henceforth mistake the attitude of the Primate of Christendom. Exercising his acknowledged powers, he had at length drawn the spiritual sword from its scabbard, as all the European nations then saw, and had spoken out in a cause in which, as the Father of the Faithful, he believed himself to have both an official and personal interest. His Holiness had not acted in haste, nor without a perfect knowledge of the degraded state of England, nor without exact information of what the new prelates preached and taught ; - nor without ^ "The number of obdurate Papists and Italianate atheists is great at this time, both desperate, and grown, as it evidently appeareth, to the nature of assassins." — Grindal to Lord Treasurer Burghley, 29th January 1572, Grindal's Remains, p. 333. Parker .Society's Works. ^Sandys had written thus: — "Our Gracious Governor [i.e. Elizabeth) . . . hath caused all rubbish and whatsoever was hurtful to be removed ; the den of thieves to be dispersed ; buyers and sellers of popish trash, monks, friars, mass-mongers, with like miscreants, to be hurled and whipped out, 10:2 "ANCIENT TRIESTS" AND MINISTERS. I03 constant consultation with those exiles for their faith at Rome,' who knew the exact situation accurately, and were able to afford him the most complete information as to what was needed. Queen Elizabeth's bishops were obviously and notoriously of a new and unprecedented kind and make.^ Her "ministers," whatever they were, were certainly not of the same order as the parish clergy of old. The " ancient priests " altogether repudiated the new; while the new in turn caricatured and condemned the old as worshippers of the blessed Sacrament, which they so pro- fanely termed " Jack-in the-box," and of idols. A strong measure would evidently not have been adopted, if one less vigorous and decisive would have been likely to have wrought a cure. It was not, however, the queen's dealings with her own religious subjects alone which brought about tlie Holy Father's action. At the instigation of her ministers she had again and the stumbling-stones of superstition, the baggage of man's traditions, with all monuments of idolatry, vanity, and Popery, to be cast out of the house of God and vineyard of the Lord." — Sandys' Works, p. 59. Parker Society. London, 1842. "The Popish Church hath neither the true foundation, nor yet the right marks of the Church of God; her foundation is man; her 'marks' are blasphemy, idolatry, superstition. Christ is ' the Head of His Body the Church ; ' this Head cannot err. The head of the Church anti-Christian is the Pope, that man of sin, a liar ; yea, a very father of lies." — Ihjd. p. 67. 1 These were Goldwell, Bishop of St. Asaph ; Glennock, Bishop-elect of Bangor ; Nicholas Morton, Prebendary of York ; Henshaw, Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford; Daniel, Dean of Hereford; Bromborough, Hall, and Kirton, Doctors of Divinity, and some other priests of experience and good reputation. " "The position of bishops in the Church of England has been from the first anomalous. The Episcopate was violently separated from the Papacy, to which it would have preferred to remain attached, and, to secure its obedience, it was made dependent on the Crown. The method of episcopal appointments, instituted by Henry VIII. as a temporary expedient, and abolished under Edward as an unreality, was re-established by Elizabeth, not certainly because she believed that the invocation of the Holy Ghost was required for the completeness of an election which her own choice had already determined, not because the bishops obtained any gifts or grace in their consecration which she herself respected, but because the shadowy form of an election, with a religious ceremony following it, gave them the semblance of spiritual independence, the semblance without the substance, which qualified them to be the instruments of the system which she desired to enforce. They were tempted to presume on their phantom dignity, till the sword of a second Cromwell taught them the true value of their apostolic descent ; and we have a right to regret that the original theory of Cranmer was departed from— that being officers of the Crown, as much appointed by the sovereign as the Lord Chancellor, the bishops should not have worn openly their real character and received their appointments immediately by letters patent without further ceremony."— Froude's History oj EnglanJ, vol. vi. pp. 552, 553. London, 1870. 104 THE CHURCH under queen ELIZABETH. again proclaimed herself the determined opponent everywhere of the cause of Catholic Christianity abroad. Secretly yet effici- ently, by the aid of spies, secret agents, and bribes, she had co-operated with the fanatical rebels of several neighbouring states in opposing their sovereigns; and this not unfrequently when she herself professed to be at peace with the latter, and actually had accredited ministers at their respective Courts. Her treatment of Mary, Queen of Scots, likewise, was marked by gross injustice, and by indecency without a parallel. This treatment ensued because of Queen Mary's religion ; for she was the last hope of those who looked for another restoration of the ancient faith. The persecution which she endured, — and which, as will be seen, terminated in her murder, — she endured because she was true to that faith, from which in no single iota did she intentionally swerve. Here, therefore, it will be convenient to set forth with certain detail and at some considerable length, in a record ranging over several years, the true state of ecclesiastical affairs, both as con- cerns the kingdom in general, and certain parts of it in particular. A private letter, an official document, a public trial, or a per- sonal squabble between officials, may often comprise niuch of interest and point, as will be shown. The changes which had now taken place had been brought about, not by unauthorised private individuals acting on their own responsibility, but by exalted officials, the archbishops and chief bishops of the National Church, who had been clothed with all such temporal authority as Pariiament could authorise the queen to bestow upon them ; and who had indeed worked with a will and system both in the overthrow of the old, and the consolidation of the new, religion. Some readers, in that which follows, may think that out-of-the-way and valueless details of information have been gathered together without object ; but surely any record of facts which serves to bring out points of historical interest may well be rescued from oblivion and be made to serve its purpose. Throughout the whole of the queen's reign, there had been constant complaints from all (juarters of the difficulty in getting the existing cures served by persons who could read sufficiently well to recite the morning and evening prayers. Early in Parker's episcopate, in addition to the " readers " everywhere set apart, he had ordained more than a hundred and twenty "ministers" in one week; and many of these were reported to have been schoolmasters, "scribes," "most ignorant persons,"^ 1 What must we say, when most of them are popish priests, consecrated to perfurm mass, and the far greaUr pari of the remainder are most ignorant DISSERTATIONS, DISPUTES AND DESTRUCTION. I05 tradesmen who had failed to get their Hving, and even husband- men. When these persons, in their ordinary secular habits, • appeared in the pulpits, they made such a deplorable exhibition of fanaticism and ignorance, that the congregation was sometimes moved to laughter and ribaldry, the new service was brought into contempt, and the people declined to go to church at all. This kind of irreverent exhibition became so common at one period, that disputes and brawls constantly occurred, even at the font and Communion board. The consequence was that fresh legislation took place, by which all criticism of these distressing ministers during divine service was forbidden under pains and penalties,- though the practice was not by any means stopped. It has been calculated that out of the nine thousand benefices, including chapelries attached to mother churches, which about the year 1570 required pastors, at least half were unoccupied and unserved during the greater part of this queen's reign. The work of destruction had not been so difficult as was anticipated : the work of reparation and restoration would possibly remain uncommenced, most certainly uncrowned, for generations. persons, appointed at the will of the people, not to the !ninisti-y of the IVord?" — George Withers to the Elector Palatine, Letter Ixii., Zurich Letters, 2nd series, Parker Society. Parker's admissions may be thus read in his own words : — "Whereas occasioned by the great want of ministers, we and you, brother, for tolerable supply thereof, have heretofore admitted into the ministry sundry artificers and others not traded and brought up in learning, and as it happened in a multitude some that were of base occupation ; foras- much as now by experience it is seen that such manner of men, partly by reason of their previous profane acts, partly by their light behaviour other- wise and trade of life, are very offensive unto the people, yea, and to the wise of the realm [i.e. to Bacon and Cecil], are thought to do great deal more hurt than good, the gospel there sustaining slander ; these shall be to desire and require you hereafter to be very circumspect in admitting any to ihe ministry, and only to allow such as having good testimony of their honest conversation, have been traded and exercised in learning, or at the least have spent their time with teaching of children, excluding all others which have been brought up and sustained themselves either by occupation or other kinds of life alienated from learning." — Archbishop Matthew Parker's Cor?-espondcnce, vol. i. p. 121. ■• So averse was Dr. Turner, holding the important position of Dean of Wells, to sacerdotal habits, that acting in his official capacity in 1565 he caused a common adulterer to do public penance in a priest's square cap. — See Dr. W. Turner to 11. Bullinger, Letter li. , July 23rd, 1566, Zurich Letters, 2nd series, Parker Society. ^ One of the bishops thus inquired: — "Whether there be any that hath unreverently abused or given any evill and unseemly terms of any minister of God's Word and Sacraments . . . either in the time of his celebration of Divine Service, or Sermon, or in the time of the administration of the sacra- ments in the Church .''" — Visitation Articles of Thornboroitgh, Bishop of Bristol, 1603. Io6 THE CHURCH under queen ELIZABETH. In some cases the lay leaders and allies of the innovators, needy gentlefolks, succeeded in getting themselves appointed to vacant cures, more especially to those impoverished. Benefices which had thus remained unfilled for several years (such were numerous) were often granted to the new nobles, to knights,^ and to Protestant yeomen who asked for them. Sometimes one person would secure as many as four or five cures within a given radius. He thus became the " farmer" of the various benefices, and was known as such ; and then proceeded to seek out some "abbey-man," "old schoolmaster," or "cunning scribe and reader," who would be prepared to minister alternately at the various churches for some pitiable and paltry pittance. Many of these persons were unordained.^ By increasing the rents of the church lands ; by inducing the reader to curtail the appointed services, and so get through four or five in one day ; by private arrangements with the diocesan officials who winked at such pro- ceedings (if paid to close their eyes or purposely look in another direction); these "benefice-farmers" were thus enabled to squeeze a little more out of the impoverished cures. Giving as little as they could and getting as much, the last thought that ^ In Edward VI. 's reign, William Cecil, a layman (eventually Lord Burghley), had been made Rector of Wimbledon, and occupied the rectory house. At the same period the Princess Elizabeth secured, through Cecil himself, the parsonage of Harptree, in Somersetshire, for " Master John Kenyon," who had been yeoman of her robes — of course, only a layman. He was, however, duly instituted, and then hired a "reader" to supply his place and do the work while he received the revenues. Sir Thomas Smith, Dean of Carlisle, was only a deacon, while Sir John Woollery, who enjoyed that dignity from A.D. 1577 to 1596, and Sir Christopher Perkins, who suc- ceeded him, living until 1622, were laymen. Examples of this kind of jobbery are constantly met with in the official correspondence of the Reformation bishops. - Of a certain Lowth, a minister of Carlisle side, Grindal, after some inquiry as to the fact, wrote to Parker on the 4th March 1575 : " I think it will fall forth that he was never ordered priest or viinisler ; aud yet halh he these fifteen or sixteen years exercised that function." — Grindal's Remaitis, p. 353, Parker Society. Eleven years afterwards, Bishop Aylmer, in the diocese of London, officially inquired "whether any ministers appointed loithotit orders taken of the bishops do baptize, minister the Communion, or deal in any function ecclesiastical?" — Aylmer's Articles of Enquiry, 15S6. In the queen's letter to the bishops, for suppressing " prophesy ings," she asseris that " in sundry parts of Our realm there are no small number of persons presuming to be teachers and preachers of the Church {though neither la-ifidly thereunto called, noryetfitfor the same)." — Cotton ^LS., British Museum ; Cleopatra, V. 2, folio 2S7. " [anuary4th, 1572: William Bele, M.A., was presented to the I'rebcnd of Schalford, (///(Zi- Scarford, at the ciueen's presentation by lapse; because one Alwood, the pretended Canon and Prebendary was, mer? laicus, as it is set down in the Register." — SWy^t^'s, Annals, vol. ii. part i. p. 277. Oxford, 1824. BISHOP JEWELL AND LANCASTER. lO/ ever entered the heads of such reforming gentry was any con- sideration for the neglected population. "Greed of gain," as Archbishop Parker admitted and deplored, " be, together with self-seeking, eating up of all charity to God and one's neighbour." The archbishop's opmions concerning ordination, its true nature, importance, and value, may not inaccurately be gathered, though but indirectly, from a very important letter written to him by Tewell.i Bishop of Salisbury, dated April 26th, 1568, as follows:— "Whereas I wrote of late under Your Grace touching the bearer M. Lancaster, now elect of Armagh,- that it might please Your Grace to stay him from further ordering of ministers, it may now like the same to understand that I have sithence com- muned with the same M. Lancaster concerning the same, and tind by his own confession that he hath already ordered divers (although not so many as it was reported) : Howbeit among the same he hath admitted and ordered one whom by the space of these eight years I, for many good and just causes me moving, evermore have refused. Your Grace may further advertise him hereof, as unto your wisdom shall seem good ; certainly in such cases his discretion is very small." Now when the date of this letter is carefully noted, it is found that Lancaster was not consecrated for nearly two months after wards, i.e. until the 13th of June. Yet, as a mere minister or priest, he had already been ordaining others ; and Jewell takes It for granted, that, like himself, Parker will regard all such ordinations, if a previous call has been made, as perfectly good and valid, though somewhat irregular ; and he does not for a moment declare them to be utterly null and void, as they certainly were. Does it not follow, therefore, as an obvious con- sequence, that the opinions then current in the New Church, and the lax practices then tolerated by its chief officers, prove_ that some at least of the leading "reformed" prelates practically repudiated altogether the Catholic doctrine of ordination? If it had been otherwise, if the law on the subject had been then what the law now is, such a case as that of which Jewell makes mention would have been properly and severely dealt with. Yet how stands the question ? This very man Lancaster, a Pro- testant, who had notoriously assumed episcopal duties without ^ For this letter, at length, see JeivelPs Works, Parker Society, vol. iii. part ii, p. 1274. London, 1850. 2 Thomas Lancaster had been Treasurer of Salisbuiy, and was consecrated Archbishop of Armagh, June 13th, 1568. A person of the same names had been consecrated, eighteen years previously, to the See of Kildare. — Loftus MSS., Marsh's Library, Dublin. I08 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. episcopal consecration, was not only not even reprimanded, but was soon afterwards consecrated Archbishop of Armagh, as if, in the case in question, nothing worthy of complaint or reprimand had occurred, or nothing out of the way happened. Election by the people, from a Lutheran point of view, was regarded as an essential in the "making of ministers" ; the imposition of hands w^as held to be an ornamental but useless addition. ^ In this conviction the above facts show that Archbishop Parker and Bishop Jewell were perfectly agreed. Many of the bishops, it is evident, were adventurous self- seekers, sometimes taken from the lowest of the people ; or needy and impecunious gentlefolks, who, together with their property and old position, had lost their self-respect ; and who, when their willingness to aid the innovators had been authorita- tively made clear to the Council, were put into places of trust and importance to continue and consolidate the policy of change. They were too often keen and successful money-hunters, and willing tools of the Court. A large majority of these Reforma- tion prelates, though constantly prating about the "gospel" (as they termed their own immoral principles), were always sharply on the look-out for something more solid and less transcendental than the Calvinistic calculations and phantasies in which they themselves professed to believe. There is scarcely one who is free from the charge of peculation, double-dealing, and self-aggrandise- ment.2 Their whole energies seem to have been set on securing for themselves, their wives and families, every temporal advantage which could be had from their official positions, or squeezed out of the estates connected with them. From the days of William Barlow, "the calamity of his See,"^ as he was termed, to those ^ Luther taught that there were two kinds of calling to the office and work of the ministry — one, internal, from God, such as that of prophets, apostles, and holy teachers ; the second, external, by the free election of the people, or by the selection and nomination of persons having authority, such as rulers and magistrates. The imposition of hands, with prayer, by some presiding minister, was a public indication to the congregation gathered together that the person had already been selected, and it was at the same time a ratifica- tion of the choice made. But it was not held to be a means of grace. The essential act was the selection, not the imposition of hands. ' Camden's Annals, in loco. 2 For an account of the disagreements between Sandys and Parker, see Petyt MS., No. 47, folio 376, in which the former writes at length to the latter. Again : of the ruin wrought under William Barlow at ]5ath. Sir John Harington gives the following graphic account from personal knowledge : — " I speak now only of the spoil made under this bishop, scarce were five years past after Bath's ruins ; but as fast went the axes and hammers to woik at Wells. The goodly hall covered with lead (l)ecause the roof might seem too low for so large a room) was uncovered, and now this roof reaches to the SOME OF THE NEW BISHOPS DESCRIBED. IO9 of Bishop Pilkington, who robbed the diocese of Durham right royally, the same unchanging policy was pursued. Sometimes, as in the case of Aylmer, Bishop of London, and his immediate predecessor, they openly quarrelled amongst themselves over the temporalties, and so drew public attention to their selfish pro- ceedings. We may learn from what Strype and others have put on record, that the queen was highly incensed on hearing that James Pilkington, Bishop Palatine of Durham, ^ had so managed to manipulate the revenues of that See, which he held for seventeen years, as to have been enabled to give a marriage portion of no less than ten thousand pounds to his daughter — an enormous sum in those days, equal, in fact, to that which the queen herself had received from King Henry VIII. her father. "If the revenues be so mighty," remarked Her Highness, "and the Crown be so poor, my lord of Durham ^ can surely spare Us a little. We will charitably lighten his heavy burden for him somewhat." So, without process or further ado, she henceforth took one thousand pounds a year from the bishop's income, and devoted it to maintaining her garrison at Berwick. Sandys and Grindal disagreed fiercely about dilapidations, for which neither cared to pay, while the forcible words and strong adjectives they both used in controversy on the subject were very remarkable. In a fierce dispute about a leasehold house at Battersea, which the Archbishops of York had frequently used when in London, the language uttered and written was both unprelatic and violent. Aylmer, too, was not a whit behind- hand either in the vigour of his words or in the grasping spirit he displayed. He and Sandys had so furious a public quarrel regarding the revenues due to either from the See of London sky. The Chapel of Our Lady late repaired by Stillington, a place of great reverence and antiquity, was likewise defaced, and such was their thirst after lead (I would they had drunk it scalding) that they took the dead bodies of bishops out of their leaden coffins, and cast abroad the carcases scarce thoroughly putrified." — Brief View of (he State of the Church of Englatid, p. 110. 1 When this Puritan was a poor exile at Frankfort, he is said to have con- soled his afflicted and complaining fellows with "the heavenly promises of riches hereafter," asserting that "few men were predestined to celestial joys who owned much money." ^ James Pilkington, born at Rivington, county Lancaster, in 1520, was third son of Richard Pilkington. He graduated B.A., Cantab., 1539; became Fellow of St. John's, Cambridge, 26th of March 1539 ; M.A., 1542 ; B.D., 1550. He married Alice, daughter of Sir John Kmgsmill, and died 23rd of January 1575, aged fifty-five, leaving his wife and two daughters as survivors. He was buried at Bishops Auckland, but afterwards removed to Durham. no THE CHURCH under queen Elizabeth. upon Sandys' translation to York, that the Lord Treasurer, for decency's sake, was called in to appease it, but in vain. The two prelates wrangled and snarled for some hours. Cecil as arbiter offended both, and satisfied neither. The prelates continued to dispute for several years, and died engaged in tortuous lawsuits. In these, and in other particulars, their characters were certainly not a little fly-blown. The first wife of this man Edwin Sandys, sometime Bishop of Worcester, is said to have been his own niece or great-niece, the young and attractive widow of one of the keepers of the Marshal- sea prison, where, at the outset of his career, Sandys had been for some weeks confined. She was formally described as the daughter of "Master Sandys of Essex," and "a right buxom woman." But she died shortly after their illicit and uncanonical union ; and he soon married another— thus piously consoling himself — Cecilia, daughter of Sir Thomas VVilford. In Worcestershire, Sandys acted with a very high hand. For example : On a visitation tour, his attention was called to an old stone altar still standing in the parish church of Battenhall,^ where the chief proprietor was Sir John Bourne, who had been Secretary of State under Queen Mary. Sandys ordered it to be '•removed, defaced, and at once put to some common use." But Sir John and his allies resisted this injunction by force, so far as that when the altar-stone was pulled down he had it taken to his own mansion. Hearing of this, Sandys became impres- sively violent, and ordered another visitation of the same village church to be held without delay. But when an appeal was made to Archbishop Parker, as metropolitan, as to the need for such a step, Sandys was advised to be quiet and not push matters to further extremities — advice which he appears reluctantly and not very good-temperedly to have taken. Sir John Bourne, on the other hand, made a series of grave and disagreeable accusations against Sandys, some of which were certainly true enough ; ^ but, on an appeal to the Privy Council 1 Some assert that this occurred at a parish in the city of Worcester. * Amongst Sir John Bourne's charges against Bishop Sandys are the following, given by Strypc : — " That the manor house of Northwike (built in the beginning of Henry VH. his reign) he had already pulled down and razed from the bottom of the foundation ; and having sold the hall, and the most part of the matter and stufi" unto his friends, making thereof a great piece of money ; with some part of the rest had raised at his palace a prettv building, which he called his nursery: to which it was also put, his wife bein"- of good fecundity, and a very fruitful woman. And that for the furniture and finishing of the said nursery, he had likewise razed and pulled down a fair long vaulted chapel of stone, standing within his said palace. That his wife being thus fruitful, he had for one of his children procured, in BISHOP SANDYS AND SIR JOHN BOURNE. Ill (all of whom were disposed to defend and uphold the innovators at any cost, and who certainly had the power to do so), Bourne was condemned for having spoken disparagingly of Mistress Sandys and urged his retainers to do likewise, and committed to the Marshalsea. Subsequently, on retracting his sayings, he was released. But when invited to spend Christmas with the bishop, who in this case appears as a peace-maker, he threw the letter of invitation into the fire.^ He continued to criticise the Protestant prelate and his lady very sharply, until the former was translated to London. At Worcester, Sandys was likewise accused of granting long leases of farms and lands belonging to the See to various poor Protestant relations, who had secured them for very low and inadequate rents. But adequate inquiry on the subject was suppressed. When he went to London, with a like benevolent intention of doing good to the household of faith, more particularly his own, he attempted a similar policy ; but the Court, hearing of his contemplated proceedings, warned him in time that such tactics were not to be again attempted with impunity ; while the Lord Treasurer, in the name of the Chief Governess, rebuked him in very strong and vigorous Scripture phrases. In London, Sandys was good enough to take under his special protection the Dutch Protestants in Austin- friars ; and, on the other hand, suppressed for awhile the mass celebrated at the Portuguese ambassador's mansion in Tower his brother's name, one lease of the parsonage of Flodbury : which benefice was yearly worth fonr hundred marks, and better, being one of his own patronage, having a goodly mansion, and a goodly demean : whereof was wont to be kept great hospitality." — Strype's Actuals, vol. i. part ii. pp. 38, 39. Oxford, 1824. Sir John Bourne likewise asserted that the pipes of a great pair of organs, which had cost two hundred pounds, had been melted down to make the prebendaries' wives dishes for their kitchens, and the organ-case had made them bedsteads ; that the silver plate of the sacristy had been divided amongst the prebendaries, and that it was intended to divide the copes and other ornaments. The bishop, though evidently much annoyed that these and such-like reports should get abroad, admitted of his accuser that " none love him for himself, but for his religion many like him." — Strype's Annals, vol. i. part ii. pp. 39-42. 1 Bourne treated Sandys with contempt, as the bishop maintained. When after many contentions the latter invited Sir John and his lady to spend Christmas with him, he not only refused to come, but threw the letter into the fire. Sir John's eldest son had a special aversion to priests' and bishops' wives, which at that period was shared by many, and applied a term to them which certainly was strong and not over polite. Sir John himself in this particular had equally offended, as the bishop averred, "three women going through his park, wherein is a path for footmen, he, supposing they had been priests' wives, called unto them, ' Ye shall not come through my park, and no such priests' w s.'" — Strype's .,4«?/a/y, vol. i. part ii. pp. 24 and 30, Oxford, 1824. 112 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. Street, to which crowds had for some time resorted. He was translated to York on the Sth of March 1576 ; but, as he com- yjlained to the Lord Treasurer, was most coldly received ^ by the nobility and gentlepeople on his arrival. In May 1581, Sandys was holding a visitation at Doncaster ; and, contrary to the canons, went to an inn in the town, where he remained for some days for rest and refreshment. One midnight the wife of the innkeeper was found in His Grace's bedchamber by her own husband.'^ The latter had returned home, as it appears, somewhat unexpectedly, and, seeking his spouse in vain in her own room, thus discovered her elsewhere. Such a discovery, of course, required an explanation. It certainly had an awkward appearance. The noise which ensued disturbed other inmates of the hostel, amongst whom was a shrewd and popular Yorkshire knight. Sir Robert Sta])leton of Wighill,^ who, at once taking in the situation, and for the honour of the arch- bishop's cloth and dignity, is said to have endeavoured to prevent unnecessary scandal. The excited host of the inn had gone so far as to threaten the exalted prelate with a taste of his un- sheathed dagger, which he brandished again and again. But Stapleton interposed with earnestness and temporary success ; for the archbishop, who, if innocent, committed an unpardonable error of judgment, consented at once to give the innkeeper a considerable bag of golden angels to purchase his forgiveness and silence.* Subsequently other demands were made u|)on the unfortunate prelate under a threat of exposure, to which both 1 Sandys could scarcely have looked for a very cordial greeting from the nobility and gentry of the ancient faith in Yorkshire, as he had thus described the ecclesiastical position in a sermon at York Minster: "As Christ hath delivered all His out of the captivity of Satan and sin, so hath He also us, after a more special and peculiar manner, out of that den of thieves, out of that prison of Romish servitude, out of the bloody claws of that cruel and proud antichrist." — Sa/it/fs' IVorks, p. iSo. Parker Society. London, 1842. Grindal, on going to York to take up his new office seven years previously, had written to Sir W. Cecil to the same effect : " I was not received with such concourse of gentlemen, at my first coming into this shire, as I looked for." It is evident, therefore, that the "new cause " had not gained many adherents. - For detailed particulars of this case, see Strype's Atinals, vol. iii. Rook i. chap, ix., and Ajipendices Nos. 20 and 21. Also, Bioqrn/^/'iica/ Notiic' of Satu/ys, by the Rev. John Ayre. Parker Society's Works. LouLion, 1842. •* Sir Robert Stapleton of \Vighill, of an old Yorkshire family, was a connection of the ancient Catholic houses of Neville and Constable. For pedigree, see p. 333 of Foster's Pedigrees of Yorkshire. London, 1875. * Sir John Ilarington asserts that the hostess had previously been Mistress Sandys' waiting-maid, and that on taking a candle to the bishop in bed, she " slipped into my lord's bed in her smock." Parsons, a contem]")orary writer, asserts that "this prelate had in his younger days been too familiar with this BALE, BISHOP OF OSSORY. II3 Stapleton and the injured husband, whether rightly or wrongly, are reported to have been parties. Such an incident in the case of so dignified a prelate, who had a wife of his own, of course afforded food for conversation and criticism in a very loose and dissolute Court when the news reached Richmond and White- hall. The queen and Leicester, evidently sympathising with the archbishop, had the innkeeper brought up to the Star Chamber for examination ; and the evidence in detail was written out for Her Majesty's perusal and edification, Leicester directing Her Grace's attention to its more salient and striking points. The result was that the judges condemned the inn- keeper to acknowledge the archbishop's innocence at the York Assizes, which was formally done ; but only amidst the jeers and contemptuous laughter of those who filled the court-house. For many months the archbishop shut himself up at home. Several coarse squibs in prose and verse on this topic were secretly printed and hawked about the castle-yard and cathedral-close ; while copies of two were affixed to the chief entrance of Bishops- thorpe Church, His Grace's parish, to the interest and amusement of the shrewd and observant Yorkshire rustics. Subsequently, Sir Robert Stapleton, when found to be an adherent of the old religion, was confined in the Tower for nearly two years, because he declined either to vary from his original statement or to express regret for the charitable part which he had taken in a very questionable and unpleasant affair. Archbishop Sandys never recovered this blow\^ According to his monument, he was soon afterwards translated to a better world. ^ A few pages must now be devoted to Dr. John Bale,^ one of woman, which is said to pass as a veniall sin wiih tliose of his profession." — Brief Vieiv of the State of the Clinrcli of England, pp. 177-179. ^ On his monument in Southwell Minster this disagreeable event is un- necessarily commemorated. The archbishop is said to have "suffered, from what the innocent mind can least of all endure, atrocious slanders." ^ The following, though vigorous and plain-spoken, is true : — " The ' Reformers ' differed from each other, as widely as the colours of the rainbow, in most other things ; but they all agreed in this, that good works were unnecessary to salvation, and that the ^saints,' as they had the modesty to call themselves, could not forfeit their right to heaven by any sins hoivever numerous and enormous. By those, amongst whom plunder, sacrilege, adultery, poly- gamy, incest, perjury, and murder were almost as habitual as sleeping and waking ; by those who taught that the way to everlasting bliss could not be obstructed by any of these, nor by all of them put together ; by such persons, charity, besides that it was so well-known a Calhohc commodity, would be, as a matter of course, set wholly at nought." — History of the Protestant Jxeformation, by W. Cobbett, p. 189. Dublin, 1868. ^ John Bale, a Suffolk man, first a Carmelite friar, was perverted to Protestantism, and then married a woman whose Christian name was H 114 THE CHURCH under queen ELIZABETH. the chief bishops of the Reformation era, and certainly one of the most outspoken and plain spoken. His name occurs in the commission for Dr. Parker's consecration ; and although, for some reason or another, he was not present on the occasion, it is evident that he was well known to the authorities, and held in high estimation by them. He had been for some time Bishop of Ossory, in Ireland ; but found himself extremely unpopular in that Catholic land, where the unattractive gospel of which he was a minister was wholly repudiated. So, as the income of the Irish See in question was very small, and his followers corre- spondingly so, Dr. Bale thought it prudent to turn his steps homewards, more especially when his family increased and his wife anxiously desired preferment for him in England. His language was often unusually coarse, as will be seen from the specimens of it now to be given. He deals with the most sacred subjects in a spirit of virulence ^ and buffoonery — a spirit ])erfectly in harmony w'ith certain of the doings of his allies and himself, but very much out of place in a minister of religion. He writes of the Catholic sacraments and sacred rites of the Universal Church in language so frightful, that many will find it (lifihcult to believe that the profane author of such sentiments was in his right mind ; while modern Anglicans may feel a little ashamed of owning him as a successor of the apostles. His contemporaries, however, were well enough pleased with him, and his writings do not appear to be out of harmony with the official " Homilies " which had been recently issued. For Parker secured him the place of a prebendary at Canterbury ; consulted him on several occasions, and sometimes used his services in preaching, confirming, and visiting certain churches in the diocese. The following are his sentiments concerning priestly ordina- tion and the Sacrament of the Eucharist : — Dorothy. As regards his perversion, l]i>hop Nicholson remarks that " his wife seems to have had a great hand in that hap]iy work." He was patronised by Cromwell and Cranmer, and subsequently by (^)ueen Elizabeth and Matthew Parker. liale died, under Parker's rule and patronage, Pre- bendary of Canterbury, and wa.s buried there in 1563. Though more coarse in his language than some others of the Reformers, he was a fair and faithful specimen of an outspoken and consistent Reformation prelate. It is cmly just to the late Rev. Henry (Jhristmas, D.C.L., to note that, when re-editing Julie's ll^or/cs for the Parker Society, he left his conviction on record that certain of them "could not with projiriety be presented to the public." ' Pilkington of Durham was sometimes equally virulent : — '' I will show vou what is written in the life and history of Thomas Becket, Bishop of Canterbury, ^//f7> -f//«/(7«^'- »/ar/yr and traitor to his prince." — Piikiugion's Works, p. 589, Parker Society's Works. London, 1842, THE NEW AND DANGEROUS OPINIONS. I15 "As touching the priests' consecration, vvliich is such a charm of enchant- ment which may not be done but by an oiled officer of the Pope's generation ; ... for in all the Bible it is not that any man can make a dry wafer-cake a new Saviour, a new Redeemer, a new Christ, or a new God : no, though he should utter all the words and Scriptures therein." '^ Of the same adorable sacrament this impious "Reformer" hkewise writes — The mass "serveth all witches in their witchery, all sorcerers, charmers, enchanters, dreamers, soothsayers, necromancers, conjurors, cross-diggers, devil-raisers, miracle-doers, dog-leeches, and bawds ; for without a mass they cannot well work their feats.'' " The old clergy, legitimate successors of Saint Augustine, vSaint Anselm, and AViUiam of Wykeham, he calls, "puffed-up porklings of the Pope;"-' and again writes — " These were the idle priests at London and their beastly ignorant broods, with old superstitious bawds and brothels, the Pope's blind cattle." Of preaching clergy of the old order of things he is equally abusive — " lyCt beastly blind babblers and bawds, with their charming chaplains, then, prate at large out of their malicious spirit and idle brains." ■* The Church Universal is — " The madam of mischief and proud synagogue of Satan." And the Catholic bishops are — " Those two-horned whoremongers, those conjurors of Egypt, and lecherous locusts, leaping out of the smoke of the pit bottomless." * The " communion of saints," according to this apostate Carmelite, is the — " Proud synagogue of Satan, with gold, silver, pearl, precious stones, velvets, silks, mitres, copes, crosses, cruetts, ceremonies, censurings, blessings, babblings, brawiings, processions, puppets, and such other mad masteries (whereof the Church that Christ left here behind Him knew not one jot), to provoke the carnal idiots to her whoredom in the spirit." '' ^ IVorlcs of Bishop Bale, pp. 232, 233, Parker Society's Publications. London, 1S49. - //;/,;/. p. 236. ^ Ibid. pp. 242 and 249. * Ibid. p. 245. ^ Ibid. p. 259. He may be fairly matched by Dr. Walter Haddon, in his reply to Jerome Osorius, a Portuguese, who wrote thus of the outcast English monks and nuns — " It was provided by laws that the sows should not again wallow in such filthy mire." — Strype's /^«//a/j-, vol. i. part ii. p. 74. Oxford, 1S24. " Ibid. pp. 259, 260. Il6 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. No fanatic who ever put pen to paper could possibly outstrip in coarseness the following episcopal blasphemy ; never repudi- ated by any authority in the new Church, and recently re- jjublished for the edification of those who are charmed with, and attracted towards, Bale's religion. "Who ever heard of so great a wonder that a dry cake should become a God to be worshipped? . . . they will take upon them to create (Him) every (Lay afresh, and when their old God stinketh in the box, remove Him out of the way, and put a new in His room." ^ Finally, for it is impossible to quote much which he wrote, and which his modern admirers have thought it decent to reproduce, he declares, in language borrowed from the Apocalypse and most blasphemously misapplied, that the Catholic Church is a "great whore," "a stinking strumpet."- "She is," he goes on to maintain, "in like case flourishingly decked with gold, jirecious stones, and pearls, not only in her manifold kinds of ornaments, as in her copes, corporasses,^ chasubles, tunicles, stoles, fanons, and mitres, but also in mystery of counterfeit godliness." "Their shavelings of prodigious beastliness in lecherous living [live], under the colour of chastity." "* The bishops, as cannot fail to be remarked, were all most obsequious and obedient to the queen ; ^ and at all times dutifully and faithfully regarded the Crown as the source of all their authority and the fountain of their jurisdiction, as Parlia- ment had decreed. They thus most thoroughly understood their true position, frankly accepted it, and do not appear to have ever desired any change ; save, of course, that all of them looked to become archbishops (it was only in human nature to do so), while the Archbishop of York for the time being, no 1 Biles Works, p. 283. " Ibid. p. 494. •'* The Reformers had always much disliked these. Bishop Hooper had asked, Anno 1552, "whether the Communion be used in such place and after such sort, as most varieth from, and is most distant from the popish mass, and whether they use any corporas cloth in the Communion ? " — Hooper's Iiilerrogaton'es. ^ Bale's IVorks, p. 497. ** Bishop Sandys was particularly laudatory of Elizabeth. Here are his words: — "Did God ever bless the throne of any man as He hath done the royal seat of Hi-; anointed this day? Hath the like ever been heard of in any nation to that which in ours is seen ? Our Deborah hath mightily repressed the rebel Jaben ; our Judith hath beheaded Holofernes, the sworn enemy of Christianity ; our Hester hath hanged up that Haman which sought to bring iioth us and our children into miserable servitude." — Sandys' Works, p. 81. Parker Society. London, 1S42. ACTS OF THE SUPREME GOVERNORS. 11/ doubt, expected in due course to be translated to Canterbury. Their new Oath of Homage, taken by each one and every one on his knees before Her Highness, has already been referred to. It behoved them, therefore, never to forget her to whom they owed all that they were, or might be, in dignity, rank, office, and state — the queen. On the whole, it must be ungrudgingly admitted that their memories were tolerably faithful, and did not often fail. As examples of their profound subservience to the Supreme Governess, it may be here recorded that Parker and Grincial, in 1561, humbly approached the queen, for letters "to authorise the now Bishop of Hereford to visit the same church from time to time as occasion shall serve." ^ Thus none of them presumed to do anything whatsoever which involved the exercise of jurisdiction, without having first sought permission from the only person in whom it was now suppo.sed to be vested. Three years later, that is, in March 1564, the queen issued a dispensation,'' on the humble petition of the Warden of Win- chester College, abolishing Wednesday as a fast day in that venerable institution ; for with Her Majesty it now lay to under- take all which the Chief Bishop of Christendom, since the days of St. Augustine, had by right of his office and dignity hitherto done for this island. She could grant licences, dispensations, and graces ; for, to quote the Bidding-Prayer, she was " in all causes, and over all persons, both civil and ecclesiastical, in these her dominions, supreme." When, therefore, some years afterwards, Grindal, who had so faithfully proclaimed the "principles of the Reformation," resigned his archbishoprick, a.d. 1583, he probably resigned it into the hands of the queen, the fountain of spiritual authority in the New Church, as the foUovving extract from his formal instrument declares: — -"Pure, sponte, simpliciter, et absolute, in manus excellentissimae ac illustrissinice in Christo principis et Domince, Elizabethce, Dei gratia Angliae, Francias et Hibernian Reginje, etc., cujus singulari favore et benignitate dictum ar- chiepiscopatum consecutus sum, resigno." Between himself and his spiritual Master, Jesus Christ, there only stood one person, and that person was Queen Elizabeth. Some idea in detail of the state of the various dioceses of England at different periods during Elizabeth's reign '■' must now ^ 13th March 1561. — State Paper Office. ■■^ Parker MSS., C.C.C. Camb., No. cxiv. p. 547. ^ In 1 57 1 there was a Communion only once a quarter in every parish church, Il8 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. be given from the words of her new prelates themselves, and others, otherwise the Pope's action might appear too severe. As regards that of Durham, in the north, let Dr. Pilkington in a ])lain-spoken letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury first tell his own story : — " It is too lamentable," he writes, concerning one of his chief towns, Blackburn, "to see and hear how negligently they say any service there, and how seldom. . . . The old Vicar of Blackburn, Roger Linney, resigned for a pension, and now, A.D. 1564, Whalley has as evil a vicar as the worst ; and there is one come thither that has been deprived, and changes his name, and now teaches school there, of evil to make them worse." ^ Archbishop Parker, in writing to Lord Burghley, gave a terrible account of the state of Norwich Cathedral, in the east of England. The diocese appears to have been equally bad ; - and the same is supported by local records. The choir was an utter desolation. It had long ago been cleared of everything valual)le — ornaments, service-books, lamps, vestments, and tapestry. The rain came in from the roof, partly stripped of its lead, and the walls were sodden ; the pictured glass of the windows broken, so that the wind whistled round transepts, ambulatory, and chapels ; the font was thrown down ; the monuments in the various chantries were in course of destruction. " The church is miserable," are the archbishop's exact words. It "hath but six prebendaries; and but one of them at home, both needy and poor, of which some of those six I know to be Puritans. Chapman of late displaced by the Bishop of Lincoln : Johnson cocking abroad, with his four several prebends (as they say) in new-erected churches, both against statute and his oath.' with a sermon an hour long. For servants and officers it began at five o'clock in the morning, and ended at eight ; for masters, gentry, and dames, another commenced at nine, with alike sermon to end at twelve. "The people," as may be read, "do orderly arise from their pews, and so pass to the Communion Tal;le, where they receive the Sacrament ; and from thence in like oriler to their place ; having all this time a minister in the pulpit, reading unto them comfortable Scriptures of the Passion or other pertaining to tlie matter in hand." — Slrype's Annals, vol. ii. part i. pp. 134, 135. Oxford, 1834. 1 Parker MSB., C. C. Coll., Camb., No. cxiv. p. 519. - One Mr. Nesse, of the diocese of Norwich, caused his bishop some vexation. He was reported to be of " troublesome and disordered behaviour. "' So the bishop rebuked him in a letter dated February 25th, 1572, and threatened him with legal })rocess if he did not mend his manners. He had been for some time a great preacher of the new evangel, but now the bishop looks upon him as "slanderous"; because he would not marry, but "fre- quented a suspected house." STATE OF THE CATHEDRALS AND CHURCHES. II9 There was no daily service, either in cathedral or parochial church : a mere "reader" read out matins and evensong once a week, and kept the parish registers.^ Communion was celebrated only three times a year; no sermon at the period of Parker's complaint had been preached in the cathedral for nine months previously, and none of the people of the city apparently cared to attend- for " the common prayer sayd only on the Sundaies." The prebendaries, with a single exception, were away, their houses dilapidated; the deanery of Norwich was vacant. Of the late dean of the cathedral and of the bishop of the diocese, Parker indirectly and vaguely, but forcibly remarked : " I have been of late shamefully deceived by some young men, and so have I been by some older men."-' At St. Saviour's Church in that city, all organs and singing having been abolished, and the minister having taken to reading the Sunday prayers from a new pulpit in the nave, — as Park- hurst had enjoined, — some of the parishioners were exceedingly displeased. One, Thomas Lynn,-^ so far resented this innova- tion, that he appeared in the church with some "cunning queristers," as some say — or with "three or four lewd boys, set on by some lewder persons," as they were described by others ; and when the parson facing the people preached the Magnificat like a sermon, they, on their part, "chaunted it out loudlie, after the auncient mode." The bishop, John Parkhurst, was a strong and irreverent Puritan ; and seems to have been always on the side of the Protestant innovators. Anything approaching to what he im- piously called " the clouted popish mass " his unrighteous soul abhorred. When the tressels and Communion board were brought down for "the Lord's Supper," he forbade its being decked like an altar ; or the retention of any rites by the pre- siding minister, which might in any way recall the ancient ' The readers, formally set apart, in some way or another, but by no public, authorised, and legal form, "were not to preach, administer the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, nor baptize ; but to read the Common Prayers and keep the registers. They were taken out of the laity, tradesmen or others ; any that was of sober conversation and honest behaviour, and that could read anil write."— Strype's Annals, vol. i. p. 516. Oxford, 1824. - The cathedral was not singular in this respect, for it is on record that " many were now departed from the communion of the church, and came no more to hear divine service in the parish churches, nor received the Holy Sacrament according to the law of the realm. This was especially taken notice of in the diocese of Norwich." — Strype's Annals, vol. ii. part i. p. 161. Oxford, 1824. •* Lansdovvne MSS., British Museum, No. xvii. folio 58. * Strype's Annals, vol. ii. part i. p. 328. Oxford, 1824. I20 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN EEIZAEETH. Sacrifice.^ The sign of the cross he also forbade, as well as any washing of the Communion cup after its use. If any minister went forth for a perambulation at Rogation-tide, he was to go without surplice, and not to stop at any wayside cross. Nor was any banner to be carried. On taking posses- sion of his episcopal seat, he apparently allowed any one who, in his own estimation, could preach and proclaim the new gospel — though " not bred to learning," a trader, or even a husbandman — to officiate in the parish churches of his diocese. Fanaticism, ignorance, and presumption were, with him, sure tokens of election and grace. At Cotessey, near Norwich, a "love-feast" was held in the chancel, the Communion board of which served as the table for the profane entertainment, round which the elect sat — an entertainment which ended in scandals too shocking for any detailed description.- In the city of Norwich the Calvinists and Zwinglians from Flanders had a church apportioned to them, and Parkhurst took them under his protection. The three ministers were named Anthonius, Theophilus, and Isbrandus. Neither was superior to the other two, yet in controversy each wanted to have the first word, the last retort, and the final triumph. They quar- relled violently, and their respective adherents came to blows. " Falling in their sermons upon particular doctrines controverted amongst themselves [they] preached so earnestly in answers and confutations one of another, that the congregation was all in confusion, and the peace of the church broken uj)."'' When the bishop interfered they would not obey, laughing him to scorn, and openly defying his authority. It will cause no surprise, therefore, that Sir William Cecil, when writing to Parker on the 12th of August 1561, declared that "the Bishop of Norwich is blamed even of the best sort for his remissness in ordering his clergy. He winketh at schis- matics and Anabaptists, as I am informed. Surely I see great ^ These were the bishop's express and formal directions: — '^ Item, that they neither suffer the Lorde's Table to be hanged and decked like an aulter, neyther use any gestures of the jjopish masse in the time of ministracion of the Communion, as shifting of the booke, washing, breathing, crossing, or such-like." — Injunctions of John Parkhurst, Bishop of Norwich. A.D. 1561. And, again, eight years later: — " At such times as ye shall use the perambulation in the Koi^alio)i dayes for the boundes of your ])aris]i, you shall not use any surplas u]ipon you, or stay at any crosse, or suffer any banners to be carried, or other superstition to be used." — Injunctions of Bishop John Parkhurst. A.I). 1569. London, John Wallcy. - MS. letter in the possession of tlie author from the collections of the Very Rev. F. C. Husenbeth, D.D. ■* Strype's ^//«a/j-, vol. ii. part ii. p. 174. Oxford, 1S24. DIOCESES OF CARLISLE AND NORWICH. 121 variety in ministration. A surplice may not be borne here. And the ministers follow the folly of the people, calling it charity to feed their fond humour. Oh ! my Lord, what shall become of this time ? " ^ With all such laxity of discipline, however, some hundreds of parishes in the eastern portion of the country remained wholly unserved. In the year 1563, in the Archdeaconry of Norwich, for example, there were no less than eighty vacant benefices ; in the Archdeaconry of Norfolk, one hundred and eighty-two ; in the Archdeaconry of Suffolk, one hundred and thirty; in the Archdeaconry of Sudbury, forty-two. In addition to these, there had been a large number of chapels "standing so ruinous a long time, that now they were quite taken down." ^ In the diocese of Carlisle, to go back again northwards, a similar state of affairs existed. The destroyers had done their work only two well. Every rapacious "reformer" had gained his point. The altars had been overthrown and broken down, the chalices and pixes stolen, either legally or otherwise, and the old religion utterly cast out. No one could be obtained, however, judging from Archbishop Grindal's complaint to Sir William Cecil, to preach the new gospel : — ■ " The Bishop of Carlisle (John Best) hath often complained to me for want of preachers for his diocese, having no help at all of his cathedral church. Sir Thomas Smith is his dean, occupied in the Queen's Majesty's affairs, as ye know. All his prebendaries . . . are ignorant priests, or old, unlearned monks." ^ Again, about the year 1565, in the diocese of Bangor, then presided over by Dr. Rowland Meyrick, the new gospel was evidently making but little, if any, progress, and the salutary practice of good works even less. " Many of the churches be utterly closed." " Therein there be neither Word nor Sacra- ments." The bishop, though a Welshman, was very unpopular, except with the laxest and most immoral of the preachers, for 1 Petyt MSS., No. 47, folio 372, in the Inner Temple. In Parkhurst's Visitation Articles for 1 561, under the head of "The People and theyr Duetie, " he seems active enough against the innovators, and asks " whether any man is known to have said or heard masse, sithens it was abrogate by lawe ; and whether any man maketh any singing cakes to say masse withal, reserveth vestments, superaltaries, masse-bookes, or other instruments of this super- sticion?" — Injiiiictions. Printed by John Day, 1561. ^ Strype's Annals, vol. i. p. 539. Oxford, 1S24. ^ Lansdowne MSS., British Museum, No. vi. folio 86. Grindal to Cecil, 27th December 1563. 122 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. he seems to have been sorely intent on both contemplating and grasping things temporal. For spiritual concerns he showed but little interest. He is reported to have been cringing and abject to his superiors, always lazy and indolent in himself, and most pompous, overbeariiig, and tyrannical to those beneath him. His lordship was evidently more indebted to the new religion than the new religion was to him. This diocese, it is put on record, is " much out of order," " having no preaching there, and pensionary concubinage openly continued." ^ Nor was the extensive diocese of Lichfield api)arently more favoured. It suffered, as the bishop himself admitted, " lament- able inconveniences growing to the Church of God by the insufficient ministry."^ The new gospel, which the old clergy secretly hated and despised, had not as yet shed many bless- ings upon the cruelly-robbed people in that part of the queen's dominion, nor could the religious state of the diocese compare with what it had been in the previous century. On June ii, 1581, Dr. William Overton, Bishop of that See, had, he asserted in writing, the stubbornest diocese in all this land, and a clergy the most unwilling to show themselves ready and dutiful in any good service, specially if it touched their purse.^ The chief church of Coventry had been long ago efficiently "reformed." The "robbers of churches" had gathered in bands and flocks, and had there left little worth taking. Some writers have laid this and similar acts of destruction to the charge of those who, in the succeeding century, sided with the usurping ruffian Oliver Cromwell. But it was certainly effected under Edward VI. and Elizabeth. Everything of great value in the shape of gold or silver ])late, jewels, MSB., and rich vest- ments, had long ago vanished under the rule of Protector Somerset. The vessels of latten, brass, and white metal — all savouring of superstition — had already been devoutly stolen, so that no one might henceforth sin by using them. Several of the bells and much of the lead had been removed. The rafters and roof-boards of aisles and chantries had rotted; rain sometimes poured in on to the pavements ; in the spring, birds built their nests above the wall-plates ; in the winter, the aisles and side chapel-floors were flooded with water; while green lichen andweeds ^ Lansdowne MSS. British Museum, No. viii. folio 7S. - " To help ihc lamentable inconveniences growing to the Church of God by the insufficient ministry, they are not only to be sifted which are already made ministers, but also a diligent care and foresight is to be used that only sufficient men be admitted to that function hereafter." — Certain " Advertise- ments," by William Overton, Bishop of Coventry, a.d. 1584. ^ Vide State Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. cxli.x. p. 18. THE np:w diocese of oxford. 123 soon grew luxuriantly on their walls. Certain of the chapels were thus partially roofless. Yet even then some adventurous gospeller with a sham commission, a mere poor gleaner in a harvest-field once rich, came and stole all the remaining brass.^ A few words may now be written as to the diocese of Oxford, one of the new Sees. Henry VIII. had intended to have had it styled the " Bishoprick of Osney and Thame," after two important religious houses in Oxfordshire which had been suppressed. But the abbey churches of Osney and Thame were soon both destroyed ; while the parish church of Thame, though of prebendal rank, and a cruciform and dignified building of considerable size for its purpose, was inadequate. So, in 1546, the bishoprick had a seat appointed to it in the priory church of St. Frideswide, now Christ Church, Oxford. From the death of Robert King, who for some time had been Abbot of Thame, with the title of Bishop of Rheon, and was one of the suffragans of the Bishop of Lincoln, a death which had taken place in the last year of Queen Mary's reign, until the year 1567, the See of Oxford had been kept vacant ; so that its revenues might be utilised in serving the queen's friends or bribing her enemies. On the 14th of October of the last-named year, Dr. Hugh Curwen, sometime Archbishop of Dublin, who, like other of the Protestant ])relates, had not been at all appreciated in Ireland, was ap- ])ointed to the See of Oxford; but he died within a year of his enthronisation. It then remained unfilled for the long period of nearly twenty-one years, when Dr. John Underbill was conse- crated on the 14th of December 1589. The poverty of this See of Oxford ; the actual difficulty of living ; the misery of many of the burdened clergy ; the notable fact that more than one hundred and ninety benefices had been unserved for nearly a (juarter of a century, and that the country people, some not baptized, were untaught, unfed, and often buried without Christian rites, depressed his lordship so seriously that, within two years and a half, in a state of incurable melancholy, he took to his bed, and passed to his final account. So that the episcopal seat in this new cathedral of Our Blessed Lady and St. Frideswide was filled for little more than three out of forty- six years. The Spiritual Governess had given its lands and 1 "The pavement of Coventry Church is almost all tomljstones and some very ancient. But there came in a zealous fellow, with a counterfeit com- mission, that, for avoiding of superstition, hath not left one pennyworth, nor one pennybreadth, of brass upon the tombs of all the inscriptions, which had been many and cn^Wy ." — R rief Virw of the State of the Church, by Sir John Harington, p. 85. London, 1653. 124 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. revenues to her favourite, the Earl of Leicester; after whose death, Lord Essex, another favourite secured them for himself. Both these noblemen so spoiled and wasted them, that there was nothing left to later bishops but impropriations and a dilapidated mansion in St. Aldate's, at Oxford. So devastated was this and other new Sees, in truth, that the bishops were actually obliged to solicit pecuniary aid from the rectors and vicars of their respective dioceses to enable them to furnish their episcopal residences. Within a single century of Queen EHzabeth's death, those who admire her vigorous policy will learn with satisfaction and thank- fulness that, whether true or false, good or bad, the old religion had been thereabouts almost entirely rooted and stamped out. Judging from a " Return of the Popish Recusants for the County and City of Oxford" made in 1706,^ they might then be easily numbered. A mere handful, no one could pretend to fear them. Mr. Nathaniel Bevan, Vicar of North Aston, officially reported that one Sutton, " supposed to be the priest," " reads mass in my parish most Sundays and holidays." At Somerton, twenty- seven persons remained, of whom the vicar wrote : "We have probable grounds to believe that they meet sometimes for their service in a house in the parish ; but they are civil, quiet, and peaceable." At Whitchurch there was only one — Esquire Hyde. At another parish there were "two old women only." At North Leigh, near Blenheim Park, " Mary Morris, wife of a day labourer," was the sole representative of the religion of William of Wykeham. At Burford, " Elizabeth Haines, a poor sojourner ; no other." At Checkendon, there was a family of the name of Grimsditch who were Catholics. At Sandford, Esquire Powell and his dependents hkewise clung to the ancient faith, as did the Earl and Countess of Kildare at Caversham, together with the knightly family of the Curzons of Waterperry, and a few more. However persons may shrink from approving the policy of Elizabeth's advisers, they cannot deny that, by the aid of fine, imprisonment, knife, halter, and torture-chamber, it thus turned out a complete and triumphant success ; for the solitude had been made, the peace was secured. With some persons, the selfish and the shallow, success is a certain test of truth. The actual state of affairs in the diocese of St. David's likewise may be tolerably well gleaned from certain "Injunctions to be observed and kept," ^ issued to the clergy of his diocese by ' To be seen in the Diocesan Registry at Oxford. - The original of these, printed in 15S3, can be seen in a large and curious collection of such documents in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. BISHOP INIARMADUKE MIDDLETON. 1 25 Middleton, Bishop of that See, in 1583. Judging them from a Christian stand-point, it is not easy to determine whether their heresy or profanity be their most notable feature. This man, Marmaduke Middleton, a person remarkable for nothing in particular, had been made Bishop of Waterford, in Ireland, in 1579, by Letters Patent. No canonical election had ever taken place, and there seems to be some doubt whether he had ever received episcopal consecration of any sort or kind.^ Four years afterwards, like other Protestant prelates, who had laboured in vain, if they had laboured at all, he found that Ireland was no fitting place for him, as the "gospel" he pro- claimed was there repudiated with scorn ; so, after the death of Richard Davies, Bishop of St. David's, on November 7, 1581, he begged for that vacated See, and in the following year, with Burghley's sanction, was appointed to it. Within twelve months he issued a large series of Visitation Articles, or Injunctions, from which much exact information may be gained as to his actual goings-on. He persecuted with vigour those who clung to the old faith ; he was a profound, intelligent, and obsequious Erastian ; he destroyed several churches and built none ; and at the end of ten years was called to his account. These " Injunctions" are worthy of careful study. They con- tain his lordship's sage and mature directions, and as must be allowed, are quite free from any taint of superstition. In the administration of the Sacrament of Baptism, trine immersion and trine affusion were each distinctly forbidden by them. No chrisom-cloth was to be used ; the godfathers were not allowed to touch the child's head as heretofore; for Bishop Middleton, as he was careful to explain, discountenanced the ancient but erroneous idea that there was any "virtue or hidden mystery" in baptism ; and desired, as a godly exercise, in the new method of baptizing, that all young sponsors should "sale the whole Catechisme," and "make an open confession at the font of the articles of their faith," before assuming that office and duty. Lay baptism he distinctly disallowed. All the old ceremonies of the mass, and especially consecra- tion, were likewise deliberately forbidden. The minister was neither to handle, bless, lift up, consecrate, nor show to the people, the bread and wine, but to "let it lie upon the table until the distribution thereof." He was to act exactly "accord- 1 It is only fair to the late Archdeacon Cotton to state that he believed himself to be in possession of indirect evidence of Middleton's consecration. See also on the other side, The Episcopal Succession, etc., by Dr. Maziere Brady, vol. i. p. 351. Rome, 1876. 126 TIIK CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. ing to the orders of the Book [of Common Prayer] without any addition or detraction." In this, of course, the manual actions had been dehberately omitted.^ No one was under any circum- stances to remain either in church or chancel unless an actual communicant, prepared then and there to communicate ; for this likewise savoured of the " abominable and vain " custom of hearing mass ; and if any stubborn or obstinate person kneeling on his knees, knocking his breast, or devoutly saying his prayers, proposed to remain, and would not depart when c^uietly ordered out of church, the presiding minister was, with no consideration for the expectant or the hungry, to stop the whole proceedings at once without further ado, and then summon the "troubler of God's divine service" — the ignorant person who, believing in the efficacy of prayer, i)rayed — before the judge of the local Consistory Court. The officiating joarson himself was enjoined to stand always in the "bodie of the church, or in the lower end of the chancel, with his face invariably turned unto the people." Turnings about were solemnly discountenanced. The use of a low voice or mumbling, as it was contemptuously called, was expressly forbidden. The " mass-mongers " had mumbled ; so by way of contrast the minister was expected to bellow or bawl. He was to use a loud voice, or as loud as he could make it, — for " faith cometh by hearing,"'-^ and never to go near the Communion board unless there was an actual Communion ; for such custom, to use the bishop's own profane language, "doth retain a memorie of the idolatrous masse." ^ To avoid even the appear- ance of anything so heinous during the ante-Communion service, he was to stand in his own seat or pulpit and nowhere else, " wMth his face turned down towards the people ; " and he was, moreover, to take special care that the board and tressels remained wholly unadorned, in their plain and severe simplicity. No linen cloth * was to be laid upon the Communion Table, and no other covering ordinarily ; and, when the tressels and board were done with, when the ante-Communion prayers were ended, ^ This omi.^sion, perfLClly intentional, was entirely in harmony with tlie opinions of Elizabeth's bishops, who had adopted the Second Prayer-Book. - This text was actually quoted as a justification for shouting out the prayers. ■' This custom was almost universal throughout Eni^land up to the period of the commencement of the Oxford movement, except perhaps in cathedrals and colleges. Thus chancels, when large and long, often stood disused and deserted. ■* "No linen cloths called altar cloths, and before used about masses, be laid upon the Communion Table, but that new be provided." — Grindal's Register, suh anno 1572. FUNERAL CEREMONIES. 12/ or when the sacred meal was over, they were to be removed "to the upper end of the raised chauncell.'' Again, when any woman gave thanks to God for her safe dehvery, neither she, when making her offering, nor the midwife who accompanied her, were "to kiss the Communion boarde," a very old Catholic custom, common in many parts of England, of old ; and almost universal abroad. As regards ceremonials at funerals, those expressive rites which the Church of God had ever made so solemn and hallow- ing, blessing and benefiting all who took part in them, no hand-bell was henceforth to be rung throughout the diocese of St. David, no oblations were to be offered, "no prayers for the dead were to be made " — the exact words of this episcopal heretic are quoted — "either in the house or upon the way, or elsewhere " : practices which, it appears, had been too frequently and universally tolerated by the clergy of this diocese up to the time of Middleton's unwelcome arrival. Month's-minds or year's-minds were absolutely prohibited. All "popish supersti- tion" was to be given up. A practice of the communion of saints was thus authoritatively forbidden and cast out. Again, if strange ministers came to pay their respects to the memory of any departed Welshman, they were not to array themselves in rochets or surplices, nor to carry lighted candles or torches, nor to place any wax tapers on or near the corpse whilst it was in the church. If they prayed at all, they were to pray not for the person departed , but for themselves, a form of selfishness peculiarly repulsive on such an occasion. A short peal was to be rung both before and after the funeral ; and then the people were to depart without adding any ancient Catholic prayers of their own, or anything w^hich resembled them. Wooden crosses were not to be erected, as had been so long the custom, and was common, where the corpse had rested on its way to its last earthly home ; while the putting-up of " crosses of wood " in the churchyard " upon or about the grave " was also distinctly for- bidden. Hence, until quite recent times, no cross was ever found placed at the head of a grave. Almost all churchyard crosses were broken, though sometimes the shaft remained. Moreover (and here the actual words are quoted), " Images, pictures, and al monuments of fained miracles, as well in walles, as in glasse wdndowes [shall] be defaced ; and namely [i.e. par- ticularly] the Image of the Crucifixe^ and the two Maries in the ^ It has always seemed to the author quite an incomprehensible mystery why these " Reformers" displayed so satanic a hatred of the crucifix and of representations of the crucifixion. 128 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. chauncell windowes." Pictures of the queen herself, together with gorgeous representations of Her Majesty's heraldric achieve- ment, were alone allowed by way of internal decorations. Later on, when Christian sacraments had been dragged down to the level of Jewish types of the same, representations of Moses and Aaron were admitted. All rood-screens likewise were to be pulled down. With regard to questions of living, morals, and theological duties, it was enjoined that those ministers who had previously kept inns, taverns, or " victuallying houses " were to give them up, learn to read better and more intelligibly, and stick to the study of BuUinger's "Decades" or the published "Homilies," which were so plain spoken, spirited, and impressive. Nor were these ministerial worthies, who, never having themselves learnt, were now commissioned to teach, ever to play at dice, cards, tables, or bowls. Four times a year, with a loud voice and in an impressive manner, they were to read out in church the " Queen's Majestie's Injunctions." They were, furthermore, to possess no books of divinity except such as had been specially recommended and approved by their bishop; nor was any man to have two wives, or any woman to have two husbands — one of his lordship's most practical and important provisions — for gross looseness of morals had too speedily followed upon misbelief and grave laxity of doctrine. From Wales let us now pass to Lincolnshire, the chief part of one of the most important dioceses of England. The old diocese of Lincoln, then as now, embraced more than one county and a large tract of land, perhaps but sparsely populated. It took in the whole of the central part of eastern England, from Barton-upon-Humber and Great Grimsby in the north, to Oowland and Market Deeping in the south, with the Isle of Axholme and the county of Nottingham. As early as the reign of William Rufus, St. Remigius, the devoted Bishop of Dorchester-upon-Thame, in Oxfordshire, had, for good and suffi- cient reasons, removed his See from a sacred spot, well wooded and watered, where the junction of two ancient rivers is made, to a fortified place in the north-east — the present ancient and interesting city of Lincoln. St. Hugh the Carthusian, and Alexander the Munificent, by their charitable labours, had each left their impress upon the devout and reverent people under them ; while those parts of Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire which in previous generations had perhaps owned Dorchester as their mother Church henceforth turned to the important See of Lincoln, as a child turns to its i)arcnt, for guidance and aid. THE DIOCESE OF LINCOLN. 1 29 The city itself must have been once fair and beautiful in the sight of God and the holy angels ; for there, independent of the glorious and richly-furnished cathedral of Our Lady and St. Hugh, which towered over weald and wold, no less than fifty-two parish churches,^ with all their efficient machinery, — their rich altars and lighted lamps, their means of grace for the unre- generate, and their angel's food for the pious wayfarer, — stood around and about that majestic sanctuary, calling people by open door and pleasant chime to worship and prayer, and silently reminding them ever of the unseen world, its beauty and its peace. Throughout the shire, all around, northward, eastward, and westward, — dotted here and there amid clumps of trees, or where willows marked out the tortuous way of some sluggish stream, or nestling under some green slope, — rose spire or tower or stunted bell-cote of many a village fane. Throughout Lincolnshire, prior to the sixteenth-century changes, no less than a hundred and eight religious houses had long been centres of light and life to a people who appreciated and valued them. Of these the more celebrated were the abbeys of Barlings and Bardney, Swineshead and Croyland, with the notable priory of Sempringham, where St. Gilbert had so often prayed. The Knights Templars had owned five houses, which were suppressed and destroyed ; while no less than fourteen hospitals, where the corporal works of mercy had long been charitably practised to the great benefit of the poor, shared a similar fate. Those persons who had been subservient to King Henry VHI., those who in the succeeding reign had actively supported Protector Somerset and his policy, and those who later on were secret and sure allies of Cecil and Walsingham, had secured a considerable share of the various spoils. Such gained a few things here, if they lost more hereafter. Many ancient families, impoverished by the disastrous Wars of the Roses, to their eternal shame, consented to acquiesce in the unhappy changes carried out, on condition of being allowed to participate in the lands and manors stolen from the religious communities. Under Edward VL, as is well known, much had been done in many parts of England to strip the parish churches of their ornaments and treasures. On the 15th of February 1549, Com- missioners had been despatched in all directions to find out exacdy what still existed of value, and to take inventories of the same. Two years afterwards, other commissions were issued to do a similar work; and, again, two years later, in May 1553, ^ Now there are but fifteen. I I30 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. a fresh set of inquisitors was sent about to different dioceses on a like errand. These Commissioners were even then most unpopular. The people in general were Catholic, and saw with horror and dismay the churches of the Most High plundered, desecrated, and rendered utterly destitute of any kind of religious worship or service.^ The bells of the churches were never rung; the doors seldom opened. Parsonages were in ruins. It was in vain, however, at that time that Humphrey Arundell, the valiant Cornish soldier, rose in defence of the faith, in his wild western country, and in the name of some hundreds petitioned for an immediate restoration of the abolished mass ; for the ancient rites and the old religion. In Berks, Hants, and Oxfordshire - the people likewise rose in a fury to defend their parish churches ; so that the Commissioners on several occasions slunk away in fear and dismay, terrified at the intensifying opposition. But a recent Act against unlawful and rebellious assemblies ^ was .speedily put into operation ; and men were thus warned that the king, their sovereign lord, charged and commanded them to disperse themselves, and peaceably depart to their habitations and to their lawful business, under the pains and perils of the Act. If more than twelve persons assembled they were liable ^ "Great endeavours were also made in this Synod for the mending the poor and bare condition of vicarages, many of which were of so small revenue, that abundance of parishes were utterly destitute of ministers, to assist the people in their serving of God, and to instruct them in spiritual knowledge for the edification of their souls. vSo that there was no small apprehension that in time a great part of the nation would become pagans. Besides, to render the condition of small livings more deplorable, the pensions that were due to religious persons, and allowed them for their lives when their houses were dissolved, seemed to have been by patrons charged upon their livings, when themselves ought to have paid them. And commonly poor ministers, when they came into livings, were burdened with payment of divers years' tenths and subsidies that were payable by former incumbents. There seemed now also to be some that put the queen upon taking a new survey of all ecclesiastical livings, pretending that thereby the values of first-fruits and tenths would be considerably advanced to her, to the further oppression of the needy clergy." — Strype's Annals, vol. i. pp. 512, 513. Oxford, 1824. - In this county the old families of Simeon of Brightwell, Dormer of Thame and Ascot, Davey of Dorchester, Wolfe of Ilaselcy, Browne (after- wards) baronets of Kiddington, Curzon of Waterperry, Phillips of Thame and Ickford (Bucks), and many others were warm defenders of the ancient faith. At the close of Elizabeth's reign three distinguished priests, Francis Harcourt, Anthony Greenaway, and Roger Lee, all belonging to knightly families of Oxfordshire, and all connections of each other, were in the forefront as regards their prayers and labours for Catholic Chiistianiiy. ^ 3 and 4 Edward VL, cap. 5. PUNISHMENTS FOR ALL WHO RESISTED CHANGES. I31 to punishment. Though they demanded a restoration of the old religion of their forefathers, and the rites and ceremonies of bygone times, of which they reasonably enough felt the loss, their demands were not only contemptuously disregarded, but they were at once tried as rebels, soon found guilty, and speedily enough " strung up," — as the brief and expressive phrase stood, — as a punishment for their inconvenient and fanatical attachment to the ancient faith ; and as a warning to others who might be secretly attached to it, that if they ventured actively to resist the innovators in authority they would similarly and sharply suffer. All this, of course, was well and accurately enough remembered on all sides. The issue was quite evident. Those who lifted up their voices for God and His truth knew plainly enough what they had to expect. The least resistance to constituted authority would at once merit the strictest and severest punishment. Judges and bishops prated about "the law"; while justice was dethroned and true religion was being strangled. And though news travelled slowly in those days, when conveyances were lumbering, bridges few, and roads impassable ; yet the Lincoln- shire gentlepeople and the sturdy yeoman of the wolds knew too well what lay in store for them, if they should dare to oppose the triumphant policy of Elizabeth's chief advisers. The dark doom of the Abbot of Barlings, in the days of the first pilgrimage of grace, had not been forgotten ; for, by the side of many a Lincolnshire hearth, when the days were drawing in, had been frequently recited the vigorous and stirring ballads which so properly commemorated that prelate's strong faith and noble self-sacrifice. When, therefore, the high-principled adherents of the old religion had been silenced, either by imprisonment, fines, persecution, or expatriation ; and when, for the sake of peace and quietness, the weak-kneed and cowardly were quite known to be unlikely to make any resistance ; the work of destruction, carefully planned, was most efficiently carried out in the diocese of Lincoln. All the ancient clergy of any note or influence had been put out of the way. Bishop Watson, the chief pastor of that flock, could do little or nothing but pray, and hope for better days ; for he was safe and secure in prison. Nicholas Bullingham, one of the ministers who had been present at the inauguration of the new hierarchy, when Matthew Parker was consecrated, had been himself subsequently elevated to the episcopate in the month of January 1560, by Parker and others ; and, having by the queen's authority usurped the place of his 132 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. betters, — come into the fold in fact by some other way, — now ruled at Lincoln, with the sanction and under the special and direct patronage of the Supreme Governess. If heresy be opposition to the Catholic faith, and sacrilege be sinful, then BuUingham's words and tactics certainly merit an application of those terms to him. It would be a distasteful word of super- erogation, condemned by the Thirty-nine Articles,^ to set forth in detail the theological propositions by Avhich Bishop Bulling- ham recommended his new gosi)el to the acceptance of the Lincolnshire peasantry. He and Jewell and Bale and Pilking- ton, with Sandys and Grindal, were the burning and shining lights of the new system, and the coarse-languaged evangehsts of another gospel. ^Vhat took place under his rule in the work of what was styled " Reform " — comprised in a duly-recorded document of melancholy interest — will best be shown and more accurately apprehended than by any study of the " Decades," or by any perusal of his existing manuscript letters. No more frightful record of deliberate sacrilege and savage profanity could be found, either on parchment or paper, amongst the records of any civilised country. This work of destruction had been begun in 1566, under the special direction of Dr. John Aylmer, then Archdeacon of Lincoln, but eleven years afterwards, i.e. in 1577, Bishop of London. The various acts performed were not the result of a sudden burst of maniacal fury, on the part of an ignorant and brutalised populace, maddened by previous sufferings, or spurred on to violence and reprisals by unjust persecution ; but they were deeds done calmly and coolly - at the express direction of those who perhaps may have believed themselves in a special manner to have been the living agents of the incarnate Son of God ; and who certainly were the appointed officers of a royal lady who, at ' See Article xiv. Of Works of Supererogation. 2 Mr. Edward Peacock thus thoughtfully writes : — " It requires an cfTort to place ourselves, in imagination even, in the same position of affectionate reverence for mere articles of furniture — silk and gold, brass and stone — as our forefathers ; but let us remember that the vestments thus wantonly cut up into hosen and cushions, or made into costumes for strolling ])layers, were the solemnly blessed garments in whicli they had seen their priests celebrate the Great .Sacrifice of the Catholic Church ; that the altar slabs thus used as fire-backs and bridges had l)een dedicated by episcopal unction and the relics of the saints, and had received the far higher consecration of being the appointed place whereon that same sacrifice was consummated ; that the rood was to them the visilile representation of their God — of Him who had (lied for them on Calvary, and who, with hands, feet, and side pierced as they saw Him there, would, as they believed, come ere long in glory and terror to judge the universe. The bells that profane persons hung to the REFORMS IN LINCOLNSHIRE. 1 33 her coronation, had openly professed the CathoHc rehgion, received the Sacrament of the Altar under one kind, and who had then solemnly pledged herself in the face of the nation to maintain the ancient faith. The destruction and desolation thus caused by authority, carried out in cold blood, with preparation, resolution, and success, can now scarcely be imagined ; nor, from a religious ])oint of view, can the dead and miserable state of affairs, which speedily ensued be easily conceived. What had taken place in the diocese of Lincoln, so far as regards about a hundred and fifty parish churches, can still, however, be tolerably well realised from the careful study of a volume ^ edited with care and judg- ment by a very competent hand, and which is mainly the reprint of an original "Inventory of the Monuments of Superstition," the document referred to, preserved amongst the miscellaneous papers of the Episcopal Registry at Lincoln, — with interesting and copious footnotes and most valuable appendices added. It was not enough, as the manuscript in question so plainly shows, that the altars were ordered to be utterly taken down and destroyed, — which was done to the dismay and amazement of a large majority of the people, who were awestruck by the punish- ment with which those were threatened who actively interfered in behalf of the ancient rites, — but the sacred cross-marked slabs, which had been duly blessed in God's name, with consecrated chrism, were to be purposely and deliberately profaned. To lay them down in the church porch or middle aisle, so that the people on entering were compelled to tread upon them, was not, in Archdeacon Aylmer's opinion, a use sufficiently "common" or profane ; so certain of them were sometimes placed as steps leading to the nearest pig-stye, or even put to a more infamous and disgusting use — too disgusting to refer to more particularly : and this under the direct official authority of the Primate of harness of their horses had been borne before the priest through many a crowd of kneehng villagers when the Blessed Sacrament was carried from its resting-place over the altar to the bedside of the sick and the dying. The banners, the hearse, the lights, and almost every article of the Church's furni- ture, were connected in their minds with the solemn funeral services, which, in their plaintive melody, show forth more fully than anything else that is left to us the wistful longing of the faithful here for the kingdom where sickness and death, marrying and giving in marriage, and all other sorrows and joys of this phenomenal existence, shall have passed away." — English Church Furniture, etc., edited by E. Peacock, F. S.A., pp. 21, 22. London, 1866. ^ English Church Furniture, Ornantents, and Decoration at the Period of the Reformation, as exhibited in a List of Goods destroyed in certaiii Lincoln- shire Churches, A.D. 1566. Edited by Edward Peacock, F. S.A. London, 1866. 134 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. England^ and Dr. Nicholas BuUingham, the intruded " Bishop of Lincoln." A mere brief abstract, with a few startling examples of what was actually done in detail, must now be set forth with care. For after a study of this, the romance-writers of the Reformation may henceforth write in vain. Most of the recorded inventories are alike, both in form and phraseology ; the destruction being systematic and complete. Every trace of the old religion, its mystic sacrifice and solemn rites, was carefully removed ; while the language employed, relating to the ancient solemnities and their ornamenta^ was violent, contemptuous, and coarse, as will be too clearly seen. At Ashby, near Sleaford,- as may be read, the images of the rood were burnt, and the altar-stones used to pave the church. At Aslacbie " the Mass-books, the processioners, the manual, and all such peltrie of the Pope's sinfull service, was made away, torn, and defixccd in the second or third year of Our Sovereign Lady that now is." The same was the case at Ashwardbie. Here "all the Mass-books and all books of papistrie were torn in pieces, and sold to pedlars to lap spice in." At Bardney, the old priest, Sir Robert Cambridge, had removed the service-books ; but the candlesticks and other ornaments were broken and sold. The altar-stones of the church of Barkeston were put to profane uses, having been laid down in pavement at the town bridge, while the holy-water vat was turned into a vessel for milk. At Belton, in the Isle of Axholme, a representation in alabaster of All Saints, with "divers other idolls," were cut in pieces, burnt, and defaced. What the churchwardens profanely call "a sepulchre, with little Jack," — i.e. the Blessed Sacrament, — had been smashed a year ago, "but little Jack was broken in peces this yeare by the said churchwardens." Here, too, the altar cloths were said to be "rotting in pieces in the bottom of a cheste." At Bichfield, the torn-down altar-stones had been ])laced on Broad Bridge to bear up the bank. At Billingborough, the churchwardens certified to Bishop BuUingham that "all the trumpery and popish ornaments were sold and defaced, so that there rcmaincth no superstitious monument within our parish church." The sacring-bell of Burton Goggles Church had been given to William Eland, who contem])tuously hung it by his horse's ear. At Bomnbie, the j)i.\ had been used for a salt-cellar ; 1 "The churchwardens shall see that the altar-stones be broken, rlefaced, and bestowed to some coininon use." — Injunctions of Edimmd Grindal, 1571. London : William Serres. ^ For details, see pp. 29-171 of Mr. Peacock's important volume. DESTRUCTION OF CHURCH ORNAMENTS. 1 35 while at Botheby, when Archdeacon x\ylmer held his visitation, the rood-loft had been sold to one Richard Longland, church- warden, who made a bridge of it by which his cattle might reach their pasture. The altar-stone was disposed of to Mr. Francis Pennell, who made a fire-hearth of it. At Braughton two pixes which held the Sacrament had been given as playthings to a child ; while at Braunceton the altar-bread box of bone or ivory became the money-box of John Watts. Here Robert Bellamy bought two corporas cases, "whereof his wife made of one a stomacher for her wench," and of the other, when ripped up, a purse. The pix cloth of this parish had been secured by John Storr, whose "wief occupieth yt in wiping her eies." These arrangements were sanctioned at Lincoln by the bishop and others on the i8th of March 1565. At Croxbie, when some plumber was mending the leads of the nave, and needed a fire for his work, the crucifix and the images of Our Lady and St. John were thrown into it and burnt. Of the rood-loft, a Mr. John Sheftield, ancestor of the present Earls of Mulgrave, made a ceiling in his house ; and of one of the altar-stones a sink for his kitchen. At Croxton, the tabernacle for the Blessed Sacra- ment was converted by some earnest Reformer into a dresser upon which to set dishes. Of one of the chasubles at Denton, a certain William Green made a velvet doublet ; the sepulchre from the chancel John Orson turned into "a presse" for his own clothes. At Dowsbie the churchwardens had secured two suits of vestments, of which they made cushions and bed quilts ; while at Durrington it is thus recorded : — " Altar-stones ij — one is broken and paveth the church, and the other is put to keep cattail from the chappall wall ; and yet standeth edgewaies on the ground." At Gonwarbie, two copes and two chasubles were sold to a tailor, and a holy-bread basket to a fishmonger "to Carrie ftish in ; " while at Grantham, St. Wulfran's shrine was sold to a goldsmith, and the proceeds devoted to the purchase of a " sylver Pott, parcell gilt, and an ewer of silver for the mynis- tracion of the holye and most sacred Supper of Oure Lorde Jhesus Crist called the Holye Communyon." Three altar- stones from Habrough Church were first broken, and one of them was then laid in the porch,i so that the people should be obliged ^ These pages are being prepared for the press at the little village of Chearsley between Thame and Aylesbuiy, where the Buckingham family of Francklin were once lords of the manor, and founded a chantry ; and I find that one of the altar-stones, with its top downwards, placed as a step at the south porch of the church in Queen Elizabeth's reign, still remains. It measures 4 feet 8 inches by 2 feet I inch, is nearly 4 inches thick, and is bevelled round its edge. 136 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. to tread upon it on entering ; while stepping-stones for man and dog at the churchyard stile were made of the other two. The Vicar of Haconbie must have been a person somewhat deficient in piety and reverence; for the rood here with Mary and John were burnt under his direction, as well as an elaborate reredos of alabaster, " full of images." The altar candlesticks were also broken, two purple velvet vestments were cut up and made into cushions ; while the vicar himself was foremost in his energy for such reform. Of the tabernacle veil he made a hanging for his own hall, of two banner cloths he made window-curtains for the vicarage parlour, and of an altar canopy of velvet he made him- self a tester for his bed ; where, when awake, he and his lady, by due contemplation, with their eyes turned upwards, could con- stantly realise the practical advantages of the "Reformation." The holy-water stoup this religious and reverent divine deliber- ately turned into "a swine's troughe." At Horblinge the MS. service-books were sold to a mercer, who tore them up to wrap spice in ; the rood-loft to a certain John Craile, who made of it a weaver's loom ; three altar-stones were used for swine troughs and bridges ; while two old vestments were given to Richard Colson, a scholar, who, it is on record, "haith made a player's cote thereof" The altar-stones at Kelbie are "defaced and laid in high waies and serveth as bridges for sheepe and cattail to go on ; so that there now remaineth no trash nor tromperie." At Langtoft, one altar-stone was ])laced at the bottom of a cistern, another was used in mending the church wall, and a third inserted in a fire-hearth. A bedstead was made out of the rood-loft of Osbombie by John Audley — a member of an illegitimate branch of the baronial family of that name. At Market Raisen the " rood with Mary and John — with the rest of the idolatrous images belonging to the abominable mass," had been burnt three years previously. The cross cloth of Stallingbrook had been sold to some strolling ])layers ; that at Tallington the churchwarden, John Wright, took and hung up in his hall ; an amice from Thorpe was given to a poor woman, with which to make a shirt for her child. At Thurlby the altar-stones were set up edgeways to make churchyard stiles. At Waddingham the banner cloths and cross cloths were made into coats for the children of strolling players; while at Welby what is styled the "linen baggage " was made into shirts and smocks. The high-altar stone at Witham had been placed at Mr. Harington's fire-back. At Wrought, in the Isle of Axholme, " the rest of such triflinge toyes and tromperie appertaininge to the popish masse and pojjish prelate was made away and defacid in King Edwarde's time.' THE LIKE DESTRUCTION EFFECTED ELSEWHERE. 1 37 In certain of the cases here detailed, no doubt many of the crnamerita noted as " stolen " were removed by devout people in the hope of seeing better times and another change, when they would be brought out again for use.^ Many such, carefully hidden away, have been from time to time discovered. A Lincoln antiquary - of taste and repute some years ago gathered a large collection of old vestments and fragments of hangings from different parts of the diocese. Now, when it is remembered that Bishop BuUingham and Archdeacon Aylmer, under whose authority the frightful deeds thus put on record had been done, were not only perfectly in harmony with Queen Elizabeth, the chief ruler of the Church of P^ngland, but entirely at one with their episcopal and archi- diaconal brethren of both provinces, it is clear that the work of destruction, carried out in the diocese of Lincoln, was in no manner peculiar; that it did not differ either in method or completeness with the same kind of work done in other dioceses ; and that what took place in that of Lincoln, just referred to, was likewise carried out and completed in every other diocese throughout the kingdom. Bishops Pilkington,'^ Sandys, Grindal, Overton, Meyrick, Bale, BuUingham, and Park- hurst were each and all thoroughly agreed in their principles and course of action. In substituting the new religion, which had been set up for the old one which had been deliberately and 1 Mr. Peacock thus wrote : — " I should not have published it had I not felt that the text illustrated in no ordinary manner the spirit of the Reformation. There is nothing in the annals of the French Revolution more sickening to a Christian man than some of the entries in these pages. I did not point out in my 'Preface,' as I wished to write entirely without partisanship, the fact that from many of the churches {e.g. Scotton, p. 135 ; Market Kaisen, p. 124, para. S) things are said to have been 'stolen.' Surely these repeated entries imply that Catholic-minded persons removed the things to keep them from profane hands. I think that in many cases where the vestments are said to have been ripped up for bed-hangings, 'quishinges,' etc., that the persons who did so only made believe to put them to household uses for the sake of siving them. The John Thimbleby (p. loS) ' wat haith defacid ' a cope and a vestment was certainly a Roman Catholic. So, I think, were the Ffair- faxes mentioned under Langtoft (p. iii)." — Author's MSS. and Excerpts, " Letter from E. Peacock, Esq., dated 13th September 1866." -The late E. J. Willson, Esq., F.S.A., whose son has inherited the collection. ^ Whittingham, Dean of Durham, under Pilkington, in his frightful excesses quite equalled the dark deeds of BuUingham and Aylmer ; for he made the stone coffins of the priors of Durham, whom he termed " servants of the synagogue of Satan," mto swine troughs, and the holy water stoups of brass, which stood within each of the doors of the cathedral, into vessels for ignoble uses in the kitchen of his house. — See JVIachyn's Diary, p. 59, and Anthony a, \^ Qod' s, Athence Oxon. vol. i. p. 195. London, 1721. 138 THE CHURCH UNDI:R QUEEN ELIZABETH. duly abolished by Parliament (the adherents of which were being persecuted and exterminated), were only carrying out the obvious and avowed intentions of those State ofificials who had placed them in high ecclesiastical positions expressly to carry out the changes and so-called "reforms" resolved upon. Of course to any English Churchman of the Oxford school, the proceedings in question will no doubt be read with some pain. It is no easy task to show that the revived doctrines and Catholic practices, now so largely current in every diocese of our beloved country, and, many of them, so generally popular, were utterly repudiated by the dismal prelates, whose violent and heretical language is so awful in itself and so disquieting to dwell upon ; and whose destructive labours it is so distasteful to put on record. Men, who in a spirit of self-sacrifice now repair churches, cleanse the font, rebuild the broken-down altar of the Lord, beautify His sanctuary, adorn with pictured pane and Mosaic representation the chancel wall, — who open their restored churches for the daily office ; who, in the face of secular courts and senseless "judgments," believe in baptismal regeneration, i)ractise con- fession, pray for the departed, and have been led, step by step, to restore the Christian sacrifice and Eucharistic adoration ; and who, furthermore, look upon themselves, now clothed in sacer- dotal garments, and standing facing the crucifix at lighted altars, as sacrificing priests of the new law, — can surely have but very little in common with the vulgar anti-Catholic bishops of Queen L^lizabeth's day, whose profane and awful words, when read at a distance of three centuries and more, make a reverent person shudder ; and the dark record of whose blasphemies and active wickedness, when calmly faced, sends a thrilling shiver through the heart of a Christian, and makes every decent Englishman — unparalysed by indifference and not choked by false Science — blush for shame that such officials ever belonged to so moderate and respectable an institution as the Church of England by law established, now appears. The change for the better which in several respects has taken place of late years in this communion, as those external to it allow, is, in truth, little short of miraculous. In Queen Eliza- beth's reign, the bishops and ministers, having only little to give, of course gave but little. But " to him that hath shall be given." The grace of baptism used aright merits more grace — the gift of contrition and the admitted efficacy of prayer. An imperfect knowledge of the Most High, duly made use of, merits more knowledge. That which is used for God's honour and glory is never squandered, and cannot be altogether lost. Nor are men, PRESENT-DAY CHANGES FOR THE BETTER. 1 39 after they have known the grace of baptism, what they were before. In the present day, some Enghshmen frequently complain of the policy, principles, and action of the bishops of the Established Church under difficult circumstances, and when dealing with delicate and complex cases ; and ofttimes they complain without just cause ; for, as a rule, those dignified officials are perfectly true to the duties imposed on them, and obedient and faithful to their present Master — the British public.^ Too much independ- ence should not be looked for from them. The water-spring can never rise above its source ; nor, to use another simile, are grapes gathered from thorns. In the present day Her Most Gracious Majesty's bishops, notwithstanding their extraordinary but precedented Oath of Homage, are obviously far superior in character to those of Elizabeth, the first female Governor of the Church of England ; for they are decorous, moral, and moderate. It is true that they are sometimes more active in defending the temporalties and position of the Establishment than the Creeds which it still professes to maintain ; in other words, some seem to value more highly their temporal than their spiritual trusts — ■ yet they are almost always active, well-informed, worldly-wise, and shrewd. No bishop of the times in which we live would, for example, think of marrying, or rather of taking into his keeping as mistress, the attractive spouse of a butcher, as did John Poynet ; nor would any modern Archbishop of Canterbury, as did Cranmer, — after the woman in question had obtained a divorce, and the amorous prelate was waiting to welcome her to bed and board, — publicly officiate at the questionable nuptials, and so seal his suffragan's happiness. Nor, in truth, would a modern Anglican prelate of the exalted rank of Archbishop Sandys put up at an inn during his visitation rounds, and so far forget himself as to allow the wife of the host to be discovered in his sleeping-chamber during the darkness and quiet of midnight. With all their drawbacks and difficulties, therefore, English Churchmen have much for which to be thankful. What has been already accomplished may be reasonably regarded as an earnest of what it is still possible to labour for, with zeal and credit, and it may be, after all, with success. ^ The reader who is curious to see how gradual, but certain, has been the change from the " Royal Supremacy," invented at the so-called " Reforma- tion " to the " Supremacy of Public Opinion," may read with interest, and possibly with profit, an article on that subject in the Reunion Magazine^ vol. i. London, 1879. CHAPTER V. A COPY of the Bull of Pope Pius V., already duly published and set forth, was affixed to the door of the English ambassador's house at Paris ; and another was placed on the gate of the Bishop of London's Palace at St. Paul's, late at night on May the 24th, 1570, by John Felton, a gentleman of Southwark, and Cornelius Irishman, a priest. Of these the former was tried for high treason at Guildhall on the 4th of August, and found guilty. His attachment to the old religion was evidently deep, earnest, and enthusiastic, as the risk he had run showed. Under the severest and most cruel torture, borne without shrinking, he absolutely refused to name his accomplices ; he declined, more- over, to acknowledge that he had received the copy made use of from the chaplain of the Spanish ambassador ; he gloried in having thus promulgated the document, and asserted his perfect readiness to die a martyr to the faith of his fathers. To the "heretical system," as he termed it, which the queen and her advisers had set up, he professed his cordial repugnance ; he declined, after the decision of the Pope, to acknowledge Eliza- beth as his sovereign ; but personally, as he asserted, bore her no malice whatsoever, hoping that she would one day renounce her heresy and accept the faith ; while on the morning of his execu- tion, August 8th, as a token and testimony of earnest sincerity, he drew a diamond ring of the value of four hundred pounds from off his finger, and sent it by the Earl of Sussex as an offering to the queen. Though she professed to despise the sentence pronounced by the Pope, and though her advisers appeared to treat it with the utmost contempt, it is tolerably clear that neither the one nor the others at all liked it ; and it is perfectly certain that it was a cause of much suspicion, uneasiness, and alarm to both. Making it a subject of conversation with her ambassadors, she is said to have declared it to be an insult to all the European sovereigns ; and induced the Emperor Maximilian to endeavour to get it withdrawn. The Holy Father, on being solicited to do this, at BULL OF rOPE PIUS V. I4I once perceived, as all but Cecil and his allies saw, that the blow had been keenly felt. But before his Holiness could give any- reasonable answer to the emperor's request, he must first know whether Elizabeth acknowledged his authority. This was a preliminary and crucial point which could not be overlooked. Having procured intervention regarding the Bull, it might be presumed that she did. But to the definite question, " Does the Queen of England regard the sentence as valid or invalid ? " he must have an unambiguous and reasonable answer. If Her Majesty looked upon it as valid, why did she not at once seek reconciliation with the successor of St. Gregory and the Chief Bishop of Christendom? If invalid, there was, of course, nothing to revoke ; for, from her own standing-point, the act was null and void. The pitiful revenge, which, with written oaths and strong language, she had threatened, was altogether beneath the Pope's notice. As the earthly father of the Christian family, and acting in his Master's name, he had, as he remarked, only done his duty. If, therefore, the queen did not repent and alter her policy, events must take their course. Her Majesty's advisers, therefore, lost no time in taking fresh action consequent upon the publication of this Bull. Parker, Grindal, and Sandys, judging from their advice, held that it was a matter to be treated with contempt ; but whether this was their true and secret opinion appears exceedingly doubtful. Cecil certainly did not agree with them, but thought otherwise. For a local insurrection in Norfolk, in which Esquire John Throckmorton took a leading part, appeared to give some grounds for disquiet. On the 2nd of April 1571, consequently several fresh laws, most carefully and artfully framed, were duly and finally passed ; ^ and such was the practical response made by the queen to the Pope. Henceforth if any one called Eliza- beth a heretic, or gave her the title of schismatic, or declared her to be an usurper or an infidel, he was liable to be charged with treason and punished. What the punishment for treason was no one was ever allowed to forget. Any one introducing a Papal Bull into England was likewise held to be a traitor ; and, if the fact were proved, the usual punishment followed. All persons who should, by writing or printing, dare to affirm that any one particular person was the heir of the queen, " except the same were the natural issue of her body " - — a phrase of remark- 1 Some propositions relating to persons who refused to communicate at the new service of the Supper were so extravagant, that, when certain peers com- plained of their tyrannical character, they were withdrawn. ^ At one period most unpleasant rumours were afloat, amongst others a 142 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. able significance — were to be imprisoned for twelve months for the first offence, and to suffer the penalties of prccmunire for the second. Furthermore, if any English people were found sending over relief to their expatriated relations, who, because of the fury of the persecution and the impossibility of exercising the Catholic religion at home, had gone abroad, very severe punishments at once ensued. Finally, those who went abroad without licence, as well as those who had obtained written permission to go, were to return at once after a warning by proclamation, at the risk of forfeiting all their goods and chattels, and the profits of their lands during lifetime, to the queen's use. Tyranny is no term with which to describe such proceedings. The darkest age of barbarism — when cruellest despots, without responsibility or conscience, governed undraped savages — could scarcely produce parallels to the policy of this fearful woman and her unprincipled advisers. Her government was in fact a pure and simple despotism — a despotism of the darkest dye.^ The Court of High Commission and the Star Chamber Court were the principal instruments by which such alarming despotism was carried out ; and if unpopularity met any man of rank or mark ; if, in the hearing of a spy of Cecil's, or of some long-eared and contemptible informer, he uttered a word or sentence which might be twisted and turned against him ; or if the queen found him less pliant or obsequious than she thought he ought to be, he stood henceforth in the greatest danger of liberty or life. Both those who adhered to the old religion, and those who were for proceeding further along the road of reform, alike suffered. The queen, jealous of the prerogatives and powers with which Parliament had endowed her, was resolved to make all her subjects of one religion — that which, mainly for State purposes, had been recently excogitated and set up. This bore a certain relation to the old, for some of the leading dogmas of Christianity were embodied in it ; but other doctrines which served to preserve a due balance, and which together made up a complete report that the queen was likely to become a mother. But Lord Leicester thought it his duty to write to Sir Francis Walsingham to inform him that the queen's indisposition was but slight, and that the rumour in question was unfounded. ^ Those who assisted in erecting this system, though continually condemn- ing the proceedings of Bonner and others in Mary's reign, seem never to have been struck by their own great inconsistency. Bonner, so unjustly maligned, was at least upholding and maintaining a system which was as old as the time of St. Austin of Canterbury, whereas tlie new institution of Cecil and Parker was of quite recent date. COURT OF HIGH COMMISSION. 143 circle of divine truth, were rejected. The ecclesiastical somer- sault which Her Majesty herself had made between the faith she professed to hold on the morning of her coronation and that in which she now appeared to believe, was a somersault which she expected all her subjects to be capable of taking, and ready to take. The Court of High Commission enabled her effectually to carry out her plans, and especially to answer the Pope. By this she formally gave to certain prelates and State officers exceptional powers : their authority extending over the whole realm, and over all ranks and degrees from peer to peasant. These Com- missioners were empowered to exercise a complete control over both the faith and opinions of all ; and, according to their discretion, to punish all men, in any v.ay and by any method short of death. It was open to them to proceed against delin- quents by law, if they thought fit ; but, on the other hand, if these Commissioners thought it desirable, they might employ imprisonment (without trial or conviction), the rack, or any customary torture, so as to obtain their desired ends. If any man was even suspected — no matter regarding what, where, or why — they were empowered, ex officio, to administer an oath to him ; by which, as they maintained, he was bound, as a good subject, to reveal his most inward thoughts, opinions, and con- victions ; and not only thus to accuse himself, but his nearest and dearest friend or relations, and this on pain of death. Such ingenious and frightful tactics opened the door to dark acts of injustice worthy of the heartiest reprobation. Moreover, whenever they pleased, these High Commissioners could fine and imprison men as and when they willed, without fear or rebuke. They claimed alike an absolute control over the souls and consciences, as well as over the bodies, lands, and monies of Englishmen, — and all this on the hypocritical and false plea that such a policy was essential for delivering their countrymen from a "slavish subjection to a foreign prince and prelate." In the action of these courts nobody's conscience was regarded, whether Catholic or Puritan ; in fact, no one was expected to possess a conscience, while no mercy was shown to any who presumed to exhibit the least independence. Furthermore, no practical remedy for the existing evils seems to have been as yet devised, even by those called upon to suffer in patience and endure. The nation at this period was, in truth, sick at heart. The old nobility could not act together, were sometimes jealous of each other, and had lost much of their influence. The new men, ever 144 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. so avaricious and grasping, cared little for the poor ; and in turn were themselves cared not for by any of those beneath them. The abbey and church lands were now theirs ; but their first thought was to make the most of their new possessions, and so the poor were deliberately passed by. New notions were eagerly clutched at. Some of the nobility openly advocated change, and in certain cases did so with a lack of good breeding and a singular want of taste. ^ There was an almost universal restlessness of thought; disorder everywhere reigned, and poverty was wide- spread. ]\Ien by hundreds rose of a winter morning who knew not how to sustain their ordinary wants during the day; social misery increased, dissatisfaction was rampant. The successful thieves — for this is what they were — who had ennobled them- selves, or induced the queen to make them peers, had ruder imitators in the lowest ranks of the people ; who, if they could obtain success in no other manner, became cut-purses and highwaymen. For them, under the new order of things, might became right. Take, for example, one well-known case of legal wickedness and murder. Dr. John Storey, a distinguished civilian who in King Edward VI. 's reign had done all that lay in his power to oppose the changes in religion, and who, under Queen Mary, had been commissioned to see that the rood and its attendant images, with a figure of the patron saint of every church, had been restored, was now to suffer death. He had done this good work of reparation and restoration so energetically and enthusi- astically that the innovators, no bad judges of who were their friends and who their enemies, held him in particular abhorrence. The earlier Reformers had often singled him out for special abuse ; for he had frequently exposed their heresy and self-seeking, had drawn a most powerful contrast ^ between the old religion and ^ The Duchess of Suffolk, wife to Mr. Peregrine Bertie, a renowned Protestant, had had a small rochet and chimere (the domestic dress of a bishop) made for one of her poodle dogs, which, in contempt for the Bishop of Winchester, she put on the animal's back, with its fore-legs in lawn sleeves. The dog itself she was polite enough to name "Gardiner." — See Memoir of Peregrine Birtie, Eleventh Lord I'Villoiigliby de Eresby, etc. London, 1S3S. - The contrast has been vigorously drawn in recent da3-s by Mr. J. A. Eroudc, though his conception of the Catht)lic religion and Catholic practices is as inexact as it is queer. Some assertions he makes, if made in earnest, are exaggerated caricatures, altogether unworthy of a writer of history : — "The Catholic believed in the authority of the Church; the Reformers in the authority of Reason. Where the Church had spoken, the Catholic obeyed. His duty was to accept without question the laws which councils had decreed, which Popes and bishops administered, and, so far as in him lay, to enforce on others the same submission to an outward rule which he DOCTOR JOHN STOREY. I45 the new, and was exceedingly plain spoken and zealous for the faith. On Queen Mary's death he had prudently withdrawn to the Netherlands, where he received an appointment in the local Custom-house. There he was often brought into contact with English merchants. On one occasion, evidently by previous arrangement with the authorities at home, he was seized bodily, when searching an English vessel, and brought by force to England. Though guilty of no transgression save that of self- expatriation, so that he might observe without let or hindrance the religion of his forefathers, he was at once put into confine- ment in the Tower ; ^ and at the age of seventy years cruelly executed. The Oath of Supremacy - was at once tendered him ; but he refused to take it, as contrary to his faith and conscience. Neither argument nor threat could move him. He had never had a doubt that such a she-supremacy, the acceptance of which it was endeavoured to impose upon him, was both ridiculous and profane ; and no inducements held out of a few regarded as divine. All shades of Protestants, on the other hand, agreed that Protestants might err ; that Christ had left no visible representative, whom individually they were bound to obey ; that religion was the operation of the Spirit on the mind and conscience ; that the Bible was God's Word, which each Christian was to read, and which, with God's help and his own natural intelligence, he could not fail to understand. The Catholic left his Bible to the learned. The Protestant translated the Bible, and brought it to the door of every Christian family. The Catholic prayed in Latin ; and whether he understood his words, or repeated them as a form, the eflect was the same, for it was magical. The Protestant prayed with his mind, as an act of faith, in a language intelligible to him, or he could not prny at all. The Catholic bowed in awe before his wonder-working image, adored his relics, and gave his life into the guidance of his spiritual director. The Protestant tore open the machinery of the miracles, flung the bones and ragged garments into the fire, and treated priests as men like himself." — Froude's History of England, vol. vii. pp. 23, 24. London, 1863. ^ On the walls of the Beaucliamp Tower the inscription, no doubt cut with his own hand, still remains, thus : — 1570 : IHON . STORE . DOCTOR . - "Bishop Burnet acquaints us, in his History of the Refo7-vtalion, that Queen Elizabeth scrupled at first very much to accept the supremacy. And well she might. For she could not but know herself unqualified by her very sex, even for the lowest degree of any ecclesiastical dignity or function. Yet she accepted it, and discarded the Pope, as her father had done before her, though upon a different motive. For Henry did it to be revenged of the Pope ; but Queen Elizabeth's motive was ' l)ecause she knew very well,' says Dr. Haylin, ' that her legitimacy and the Pope's supremacy could not stand together.' So that although her policy was not quite so bad as her father's, it was mere policy and interest of state that determined her to this capital article of her Reformation, and the considerations of religion had no part in it." — England s Conversion and B formation Compared, p. 302. Antwerp, 1725. K 146 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. more years of life (he had already reached the appointed three- score years and ten) could lead him for an instant to alter his noble determination. He was consequently condemned to be drawn, hung, dismembered, disembowelled, and quartered ; and thus, his punishment deliberately prolonged, the poor old man suffered. When cut down from the hanging-post alive — an important i)art of the sentence — he is said to have struggled with, and struck the executioner, who was drawing out the bowels from his ripped up and bleeding body ; but, of course. Storey, wounded, maimed, and half-strangled was soon overcome, and groaning heavily, then died for his religion and his conscience in excruciatmg agonies. Thus men of independence and vigour, the grey-haired as well as the hale and lusty, were put out of the way. It needed a firm faith in the unseen world, and a full reliance on the Almighty's promised help in time of need, to enable them thus nobly and calmly to meet death. God grant that, if the valley were shadowy and dark for such sufferers, the land beyond was fair and peaceful and bright to their disembodied souls ! But even this bloody method failed of its purpose. Uni- formity was never attained ; divisions, as will be seen, steadily increased. Dr. Bonner, Bishop of London, whose dignity and revenues had been usurped, died a prisoner in the Marshalsea on the 5th of September 1569. He was unpopular because he had taken an active part, in Mary's reign, against the innovators; and various writers have united in his condemnation. But exceed- ingly little has ever been produced to show that the popular conception of this prelate's character and actions was either just or true. Moreover, those who live for the sake of popularity frequently get exceedingly little for their pains. In sowing over- abundantly they often reap but very sparingly. Bonner was more than once offered his liberty if he would change his re- ligion ; but he died as he had lived, a consistent man and a good Catholic, preferring to the smile of the present world the welcome of his Master and the eternal joys of the world to come. He was buried at nightfall in the churchyard of St. George's, Southwark.' ^ Bisho]> Sandys thus wrote to Cecil: — "Dr. Fionner had stand excom- municate by a sentence in the Arches' eight or nine years and never desired absolution. Wherefore by the law Christian sepulture might have been denied him ; but we thought not good to deal so vigorously, and therefore permitted him to be buried in St. George's Churchyard. And the same to lie done not in the day solemnly but in the night privily." — Bishop Sandys to Sir W. Cecil, 9th September 1569, Remauis of Archbishop Sandys, p. 307. I'arker Society. THE ADMONITION TO PARLIAMENT. 147 Bishop Thirlby^ died at Lambeth Palace, where he had been confined for eleven years, on the 2 6lh of August 1570, and was buried, without Catholic rites, in the midst of the choir of the parish church of Our Lady of Lambeth. It should here be noted that many principles which those who had formed the New Church had entirely put out of consideration in constructing it, were at once true and important; and some of these were very soon seized upon and adopted by the Puritan leaders — many of whom were laborious scholars, and, though sometimes pedants, men of rare ability. The inherent truth of such principles and their obvious reasonableness ensured them both respect from the populace and acceptance ; while in some instances they were received with enthusiasm. An Admonition to Parliament, presumed to be from the pens of Wilcox and Field, two Puritan divines, who lectured at Wandsworth, con- tained the bitterest language against the New Church, and was greedily bought up and read. Whitgift on the side of the Establishment, and Cartwright on the Puritan side, both engaged in controversy concerning it. Long sermons and longer con- troversies were at that time all the fashion. This particular discussion lasted no less than six years. At its end neither batch of disputants seemed to be wiser than at the beginning. At Cambridge, one Charke, a preacher, was also anything but complimentary to the new hierarchy. It is true that as a body the members of it were a very commonplace lot, with no higher notion of their office than that they were State officers, — perhaps, after all, a not inaccurate estimate, — yet, when this university divine maintained that "Satan had introduced bishops, arch- bishops, metropolitans, patriarchs, and popes," neither Dr. Matthew Parker nor Dr. Edwin Sandys could have been exactly flattered. The polite and impressive language they had so often applied to the Holy See and its occupants was now in turn applied to themselves. Nemesis had arrived sooner than was anticipated. When, moreover, the Puritans ^ taught, for instance, ^ The only predecessor of Cardinals Wiseman and Manning in the See of Westminster. - They objected altogether to bishops and specially to the superiority of bishops over other ministers. With them all "preaching ministers" were alike. They also disliked the Ecclesiastical Courts (as in subsequent times they had the best reasons for doing), the "vain repetition" of the Lord's I'rayer, and the existence in the Table of Lessons of any parts of the Apocrypha. They further objected to the use of the sign of the cross in baptism ; to the ring and the words of betrothal in marriage ; to the observ- ance of festivals ; to the chanting of Psalms ; to the use of organs or other musical instruments ; and, above all, to the habits — the surplice, silken hood, cope, rochet, and chimere of the ministry. 148 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. that the Church ought always to be independent of the State, they only recommended an obvious truism ; for C?esar has nothing to do with the things of God. When, again, they maintained that women should have no part in Church govern- ment, except to listen, learn, and obey, they knew themselves to be supported both by apostolic teaching and by universal precedent throughout Christendom. Here they and the Pope w-ere at-one. This doctrine, therefore, they constantly declared in private, and often preached in public. The Supreme ( Governess, of course, did not approve of such homilies, and swore when she heard of their delivery. But whether Her Highness liked them or not, the Puritans continued to preach on. As a consequence, divisions multiplied, and new sects were born. As a maintainer and defender of these principles one remarkable man stood in the forefront, and for some time gave considerable trouble to the authorities. Thomas Cartwright, born in Hertford- shire, about 1535, received his education at St. John's College, Cambridge. In Queen Mary's reign he had withdrawn from making preparation for the ministry, and for a while made his living as a scribe. On Elizabeth's accession, however, when the tide had turned, he went back to Cambridge, where he was elected a Fellow of Trinity College ; but being disappointed of further promotion, as some have asserted, went off to Geneva, where he cordially accepted the Calvinistic theories in all their logical sharpness and terrible conclusions ; and then returned in 1570, when he was made Margaret Professor of Theology. The controversy concerning clerical vestures was then raging furiously and being conducted with vigour, in which he took a leading part against them. But he carried his contention with the (jueen's New (Church still further. He was opposed to bishops themselves, their incomes, courts, and officers, as well as to their lawn rochets and satin chimeres ; and in due course, because of his ability and plain si)eaking, was soon looked upon as the head and leader of the Puritan party — a party patronised by Lord Leicester. Thus the new bishops were not only com- pelled to face and receive the controversial fire from Dr. Allen, Stapleton, and others, who for several years had so ably and consistently maintained the ancient faith, but were now likewise taken in the flank by the racy and raking arguments of Cart- wright and his allies. They were thus between two fires. The policy and method of Cartwright in appealing to this or that text of Scripture, or in quibbling and arguing about antiquity, entirely took the wind out of the sails of the Establishmentariaa prelates. They knew not what to say. If one controversialist RISE OF THE PURITAN FACTION. 149 could appeal to the Bible, so could two, or twent}^ or two hundred, and why should they not? They each did so. No one could determine the controversy. No one could finally decide it. Private judgment untrammelled and unchecked had come in. Authority had been turned out. Thus confusion became worse confounded.^ Babel was being painfully re- built. Again, this honest and out-spoken Puritan was highly incensed at what he looked upon as the pompous state and extravagance and good living- of the bishops: "He is much offended with the train they keep," are Parker's own words of complaint to Lord Burghley, "and saith that three parts of their servants are unprofitable to the filling of the Church and Commonwealth ; and he is very angry with their furniture of household."^ All this annoyed and mortified the archbishop greatly, who, what- ever he may have been, was very modest in his opinion both of his personal and official powers. For he thus implored Lord Burghley to induce the Supreme Head to step in and settle the dispute concerning the value of episcopacy : — "Sir, because you be a principal Councillor, I refer the whole matter to Her Majesty and to your order. For myself, I can as well be content to be a parish clerk as a parish priest. I refer the standing or falling altogether to your own considerations, whether Her Majesty and you will have any archbishops or bishops, or how you will have them ordered." The abject and humiliating position of this great ofificial,— this first Protestant archbishop, — thus set forth in his own words, could not possibly be more abject or degrading. He has evidently no principles to maintain, and therefore none to resign. But he is even ready to sacrifice his office, as well as himself, — to give up the whole question of episcopacy (which with him evidently could have been no question of principle), — if the Head of the Church, the new She-Pontiff, and her principal secretary should in their infallible judgment decree that His ^ Eventually the ministers themselves admitted as much. "Because that is generally known throughout the whole Citie (of London) that no one parish or parson can agree together, & that the cause thereof is the privatt readinge in houses ... we humbly require that these readers may be for- bidden and some straight punishment for this great and horrible sin may be appointed, or else the preachers hereafter commanded to hold their peace." — Address of the London Clergy to Convocation, a.d. 1580. — MSS. of Anthony a Wood, No. 8494, fol. 30, Bodleian Library. - "Tin cupps for the Supper suffice; but my Lord of Durham now hath them of gold for his lady and impes." — J True Protestacioii, etc., p. 31. London, 1575. ^ Lansdowne MSS., Brit. Museum, No. xvii. folio 93. 130 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. (irace ought to do it. In this Parker proved himself a wortliy successor to Thomas Cranmer. That prelate, who, twenty-six years previous to Elizabeth's accession, had first stood forward to make a breach with the Holy See, and who, to his earthly king and patron, had pro- claimed himself ready at all risks and at any cost to act independently of his legitimate superior, bore a heavy responsi- bility upon his shoulders. Where he had passed, others, like Parker, were ready to follow. The acts of Cranmer at his consecration had been so bold and unprincipled, and at the same time so adroit and well-suited to the temporary purpo.se of the king his master, that all the complex and miserable evils which have afflicted this nation since — the final separation, with division subdivided by division — may, in truth, be traced upward to the frightful sacrifice of principle perj^etrated when this wretched man became Archbishop of Canterbury. In truth, no one acf]uainted with the facts of his true history has presumed to deny that he was a despicable character ; and that the only noble act he did was at the close of his life, when he appropriately let his right hand first suffer at the stake, because it had been the instrument by which a degraded and corrupt mind had wrought out so many evil deeds. His notorious obsequiousness to his successive masters, Henry, Seymour, and Dudley, was only equalled by the barbarous cruelty exercised by him upon the various obstinate and wrong-headed sectaries who, from time to time, found themselves in his power. In one respect this archbishop is distinguished from all other persecutors, even from pagans, in that he not only actively promoted the capital punishment of those who disagreed with him in religion, but of those likewise who agreed with him in it. In Henry's reign, for example, he took a leading part in bringing to the stake Lambert, Anne Askew,^ Frith, and Allen, besides con- demning many others to the same awful ])unishment for denying a bodily presence of our Lord in the Sacrament of the Altar. Lender King Edward, — the Calvinistic child who was the pliant and pietistic tool of others, — Cranmer had secured the conviction ' At the church of Snodland, in Kent, there is, or was when tlie author visited it several years ago, a highly coloured and most impressive stained - glass window, of ail the tints of the rainbow, in which certain of the re- forming bishops are represented, above the Comnninion Tal)le, in the most gorgeous Eucharistic vestments — "the garments of Babylon," as tliey would have termed them. In one of the lights is a highly idealised representation of Cranmer; in another — with somewhat of inconsistency, not apparent doubtless to those who put it up — a representation of this veiy "Anne Askew " whom he had bruuglit to the stake. AUTHORITY IN THE NEW COMMUNION. 151 of Arians and Anabaptists — two of whom, Joan Knell and George Van Parr, he actually caused to be burnt, personally preventing the king from pardoning the poor wretches, by authoritatively and unctuously assuring him that "princes being God's deputies, ought to punish impieties against Him."^ But to return to the method by which the New Church was practically ruled — a point of great practical moment. For many persons nowadays hold that what they term " recent innova- tions " - had no place in the pure conception and perfect scheme of the " Reformers," — a remarkable delusion, utterly contrary to historical facts ; totally opposed both to the policy of the queen and the unvarying practice of each of Her Majesty's prelates. The Church of God, as we all admit, was ever governed by lawful authorities, the bishops ; the Church of England from its first creation by the Reformers was ruled by Royal Commis- sioners, who settled its constitution, arranged its Prayer-Book, sanctioned and legalised its Ordinal, and managed its temporal affairs. These, with a few exceptions, were laymen, some of them lawyers, others needy gentlepeople who had apostatised, or " new men " of base birth and low origin, who had already risen from the ranks by servility, want of good principles, and by intrigue ; and who reasonably desired to rise higher, and secure more of the good things of this world by fresh deeds which will not bear the light of day. Their scheme of setting up a local church which they could mould, alter, and dominate as they willed was a master-stroke of state- craft. But it was also mischievous, wicked, and wrong. "God's mill grinds slowly." At length, however, some — waking from a deep sleep, stretching out their hands, yawning with a will, and rubbing their eyes — begin to see the situation as it is (not as it seemed to them in their rosy dream), and are now too accurately realising what was done. Elizabeth's Commissioners, of whom Archbishop Parker was chief, were to make strict inquiries concerning all erroneous, heretical, and dangerous opinions. They were to find out who were absent, Sunday by Sunday, from the Church services, as well as those who frequented the private prayer-meetings and preachings of the Puritans. They were to give their best ^ Burnet's Hislory, part ii. book i. - The existence of the Privy Council as the Final Court of Appeal in spiritual questions, for example ; the abolition of the Arches' Court and the Chancery Court of York ; the sulistitution of a new Parliamentary Court for the whole of the two provinces ; and the setting up, by statute, of a new and non-spiritual judge. 152 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. endeavour to suppress all heretical and seditious publications ; all anonymous and other libels and squibs, then becoming numerous,^ against the cjueen, and her officers both of Church and State, and if possible to get hold of both writer and printer, and nail their ears to the pillory, or cut them off ; they were, moreover, to deal with all adulteries, bigamies, fornications, and other offences against the ecclesiastical law — which had enormously increased — and to punish the offenders with so-called " spiritual censures." Catholics and Puritans alike both suffered. In 157 1, two Puritan members of Parliament, Strickland and Snagg, boldly proposed to amend the Prayer -Book in a Protestant direction ; but they were soon put down. The (]ueen, as Sujjreme Governess, maintained, accurately enough, that such proposals struck at the very root of her prerogative, as no doubt was the case ; and that she, as Head of the Church, being alone charged with the care of it, distinctly forbade Strick- land to go forward with the measure. At first he declined, and was pardonably sulky over the question ; but, on being warned of the consequences of his resolution, and having been brought before the Privy Council, he was most arbitrarily and illegally forbidden to attend the House at all.^ This strong measure, however, was more than the Commons chose to allow to pass unchallenged. They, therefore, protested, and Strickland soon took his seat again. ^ It was made felony "to write, print, or set forth any manner of book, rhyme, ballad, letter, or writing, containing any false or seditious matter to the defamation of the Queen's Majesty or to the encouraging of insurrection or rebellion within tiie realms." — Statutes of the Realm, vol. iv. p. 659. - Her Majesty's arbitrary action on this occasion was severely commented on. Some said that as Parliament had made her the Head of the Church, she was obviously inferior to Parliament, and must abide by its decisions. On the other hand, the promjit action she took in the case of Strickland, if justifiable with one member of Parliament, might subse(|uently have been applied to all. The Puritans were furious, and considerable sensation was created. Besides such action as that recorded above, the queen interfered personally in the election of members of Parliament. In Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire she sent written orders to those known to favour the inno- vating section, to see that her allies, and those who would actively support them, should alone be elected. Amongst such •w&xe. Sir Henry Lee of (^uarrendon ; the Cheynes, a knightly family of Drayton Bcauchamp and Chesham-Bois ; and the Packingtons of Aylesbury; all connections by marriage, and all more or less of a Gallio-like type. The long disfranchised borough of Gallon was at that period notoriously under the influence of a certain Madam Copley. But this lady had not repudiated the ancient faith, and was consefiuently held to be "not well affected." So the queen gave directions that Madam Copley's nominees should be passed over, and only "loyal" men returned. — See Loseley MSS. , and Author's MSS. Excerpts. FURTHER ABOLITIONS AND CHANGES. 153 In the meantime, those who were directly affected by the issue of the Pope's Bull, found themselves in still greater straits. Foreign Catholic sovereigns with their hands full of troubles and responsibilities of their own, had apparently allowed its promulga- tion to pass unnoticed ; while, amongst those of the old religion at home, there had at once arisen serious dissensions with regard both to its terms and its object, as well as to its immediate effects. Some maintained that it had been irregularly and un- authoritatively issued. Others argued that no one was bound to take action upon it, until the Christian nations of Europe had first determined upon accepting it in combination, and of actually putting it into practice. Argument, as experience teaches, is often easier than action. While opinions thus differed, and nothing was done, it became tolerably evident that the innovators did not intend to be at all checked or circumscribed by any such inaction. Cranmer, by his laxity regarding oaths, had some years previously taught how an Archbishop of Canterbury might become entirely independent of the Pope ; and the queen's advisers, having accurately and perfectly learnt their lesson, applied the principle involved in it with boldness and spirit. Having first repudiated the Pope, they then abolished the Christian sacrifice.^ In so doing, they were independent of every existing authority, being amenable to no one, and superior to all. In action they were wholly unchecked by any considerations of what might be said in criticism — a position scarcely conceived of nowadays when public opinion owns such an extended, and, in some cases (where prejudice does not come in), beneficent and advantageous influence. When, therefore, to say mass was to be guilty of high treason,- ^ In the abolition of the Christian sacrifice, Protestantism and Mahometan- ism appear to stand on a level. In the recommendation of penance and self- denial, however, the latter apparently has the advantage of the former. Here it may be noted that one of the queen's leading bishops is profane rather than witty (as he evidently intended to be) in the following pedantic and laboured paragraph regarding the mass: — "How many toys, crossings, blessings, blowings, knockings, kneelings, bowings, liftings, sighings, houslings, turnings^ and half-turnings, mockings, mowings, sleepings and api:-h playings, soft whisperings and loud speakmgs, have we to consecrate our own devices withal, or [i.e. before] it can be gotten done ! " — Pilk'mgtons Works, p. 498, Parker Society. London, 1S42. ^ "Treason, by the law of England, and according to the common use of language, is the crime of rebellion or conspiracy against the Government. If a statute is made, by which the celebration of certain religious rites is subjected to the same penalties as rebellion or conspiracy, would any man, free from prejudice, and not designing to impose upon the misinformed, speak of persons convicted on such a statute as guilty of treason, without expressing in what sense he uses the words, or deny that they were as truly punished for 154 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. and to hear mass, of felony, — each offence punishable with an infamous death, — it certainly behoved all those who could take a broad and wide view of the position to be prepared for some kind of action, unless the faith were to be actually allowed to die out. Of course penal laws, like the enactments referred to, could never change the nature or essence of things. They could not make certain actions, for the punishment of which these laws had been specially passed, to become crimes in the sight of God and man, if they w'ere not so before. Murders, treasons, and rebellions, great and acknowledged sins, have generally been punished with death ; but can any reasonable being — can any j)erson in his right mind, assert that to say mass was a sin at all, or a sin of a like dye, or had ever before been looked upon as such, or that it merited a similar punishment, or indeed any punishment at all ? The most holy and sacred mass was simply the august sacrifice of the new law, instituted by Our Divine Lord Himself, and offered to Almighty God day by day, from east, to west, in all preceding ages, and in every Christian kingdom, from the foundation of our holy religion to the period in question. Is it credible, then, that, as in other Christian countries, all the bishops and priests of Great Britain through a period of nine hundred years should have been guilty every morning of committing a crime, equivalerrt in its punishment to that for murder or rebellion ? ^ The very notion thus stated, though absurd enough, suffices to prove that the enactment of these sanguinary statutes, — executed for generations, and some of them remaining as laws of the land within the memory of their religion as if they had been convicted of heresy ? A man is punished for religion, when he incurs a penalty for its profession or exercise, to which lie was not liable on any other account. This is applicable to the great majority of capital convictions on this score under Elizabeth. The persons convicted could not be traitors in any fair sense of the word, because they were not charged with anything properly denominated treason." — Hallam's Constitutional History pf England, 6th edition, vol. i. p. 164, note. ^ .Some of the more daring innovators ]-iersisted in maintaining that all "mass-mongers," as they termed the old clergy, because of their office, were "conjurors." The Protestant bishops in their sermons had deliberately encouraged this kind of language, with profane epigrams about " Hocus- pocus." For example, Grindal, when liishop of London, wrote to Cecil on April 17, 1571, alluding to the examination of Cox alias Devon, an old priest who had been taken that day. The Council, the bishop hopes, will surely ])unish him for his magic and conjuration. Devon, it appears, had said mass at the house of Sir Thomas Wharton of Newhall, Essex; at Sir Edward Waldegrave's ; and at Stubbe's, in Westminster. On the 19th, the Earl of Oxford encloses to Cecil "an Inventory of all such imjilements of superstition as were found in the chamber near Lady Wharton's bedchamber at Newhall, Essex," after the pursuivants had ransacked it. STILL MORE CHANGES EFFECTED. 1 55 those still living was one of the blackest stains on Elizabeth's character. The direct consequences of such legislation have already been only indirectly hinted at, though some few have been plainly .set forth. In the latter portions of this sketch of the Church under (^ueen Elizabeth, certain dark deeds which resulted from that legislation will be duly put on record. With several writers they have been deliberately kept in the background. Before the result of the recent legislation against recusants is considered in detail, it is necessary to glance for awhile at another part of the i)icture, and to note certain obvious features in the new order of things, which, by way of contrast, may better enable the reader to take in exactly what had been done. Many of the new clergy were zealous in their labours, and had little disposition to let their moderation be known unto all men. For, as it was mainly the over-zealous and fanatical who had been promoted to high places since the queen's accession, so fanaticism and over-zeal, held to be the highest virtues by those who expected promotion, were often rampant. Just as the queen's first Parliament had been packed with "good and true men," — that is, with persons known to Cecil as favourable to his own designs and a change in religion, — so likewise had the two Convocations of the English provinces. \Vhen those clergy who on principle had resisted the innova- tions, had either resigned, been imprisoned, or expatriated, there were no great difficulties in duly manipulating the elections for proctors. The deans and other officials were, of course, all of one way of thinking; and every care was taken that the repre- sentatives of the chapters and parochial ministers should be of a like stamp and in harmony with them, as far as harmony could be looked for. As early as the year 1562, the Lower House of the Convoca- tion of Canterbury, clearly indicating its " reformed " character, had formally made requisition to the bishops, firstly, that " no person abide within the church during the time of the Com- munion, unless he do communicate : that is, they shall depart immediately after the Exhortation be ended, and before the Confession of the communicants " ; and, secondly, that it be added to this Confession that "the communicants do detest and renounce the idolatrous mass."^ Deacons — whether distinct from " readers " does not appear — on their being licensed were expected to promise as follows : " I shall not openly intermeddle with any artificer's occupation ^ Strype's Annals, vol. i. p. 50S. Oxford, 1S24. 156 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. as covetously to seek a gain thereby, having in ecclesiastical living the sum of twenty nobles or above by year,'" — a position which, from some documents consulted, it is tolerably clear that no ordinary " reader" could have held. The furniture now needed for the churches, but not always supplied, consisted of a font, a pulpit, a table {i.e. a board), some tressels, a large Bible, and a Prayer-Book each for the ])arson and clerk. John Foxe's Book of Martyrs, a volume of controversial misrepresentations and falsehoods, which still stands without a rival, was specially ordered to be procured and left open in some side aisle, in order that all might read its gross and wicked assertions, illustrated by rude but thrilling and effective woodcuts, and so swell the ranks of the innovators. "J'he queen's "Injunctions" and the "Paraphrase" of Erasmus likewise had to be procured by the churchwardens, together with the two volumes of savoury Homilies, recently published, for the non-preaching ministers to read out to the people. The parish clerk, who in out-of-the-way places - was no doubt conservative enough, and no great promoter of change (for change was not likely to benefit him much), went on the even tenor of his way, as of old, making as few practical alterations as possible. In many places, as at St. Just's, in Cornwall ; Wincanton, in Somersetshire ; Thame, in Oxfordshire ; St. Mar- garet Pattens, in the city of London ; and at Our Lady's, Bury St. Edmunds,^ he still wore the accustomed linen rochet — sometimes without sleeves, as more convenient. No doubt he continued likewise to observe many of the ancient traditional rites and ceremonies, not specified by any printed or written direction, as a matter of course ; to ring the bells as of yore, marking peal from chime, "^ the clang of the marriage-bells from the solemn toll of the great bell for funerals. It was more probably his pious custom to begin and end all services, regular or occasional, with the sign of the cross ; to strike his breast at ' Strype's Annals, vol. i. p. 515. Oxford, 1824. - Mass was said in several remote parishes, throughout the whole of the reign of Elizabeth, e.i^. at Morwenstow and Lanherne, in Cornwall ; at Stonor Park, Oxon. ; at Thame Prebendal House Chapel, as well as at 'I'hame Park ; at tlie Manor House, North Weston ; at Waterperry House; at Wing, in P.uckinghamshire ; Nash Court, in Kent ; Raglan Castle ; and in many parish churches in Lancashire and Carlisle, where the local nobility and gentry connived at such breach of "the law"; in some places even unto the period of the Creat Rebellion. ^ Author's MSS. and Excerpts. ^ In hundreds of country parishes throughout England and Wales, the mass-bell is still rung on Sunday mornings at eight o'clock, though there be no service held of any sort or kind. STATE OF THE CHURCH IN EXTERNAL RITES. 1 57 the Confession ; reverently to cover his face with his hands at the Miserere as usual ; ^ to respond as of old at baptisms and churchings ; to have the cross borne at the head of a corpse at funerals ; and, generally, to sever as few as possible of those traditional threads- which both in church and churchyard hnked so firmly the living with those who had worshipped there in the past, and who now slept their last sleep beneath the green grass, under the shadow of some old church-tower. Except amongst the upper classes and the more prosperous tradesmen and yeomen, the people seemed to have still buried their dead, when interred in the churchyard green, in a shroud and winding-sheet, without coffins. Most of the nobility and gentlepeople owned vaults in the churches or chantry chapels, and were interred with exceeding great heraldric pomp — strictly according to their true and recognised rank. Of this the heralds took especial care, for they duly marshalled the procession, formally sanctioned the coat-armour put up, and were not unrewarded as regards fees. The clergy likewise by custom were commonly interred in the choirs or chancels, and often, as of old, with their feet towards the west. In these cases leaden and oak coffins were always used. But the large majority of persons during Elizabeth's reign were evidently buried with- out coffins. The long winding-sheet was folded again and 1 The fact that these traditional observances were forbidden in the later years of Queen Elizabeth, by her bishops in their " Visitation Articles " shows, by implication, that they were still practised in some places. -As late as the first year of James I., one Howell Thomas was buried openly in the parish church of Caerleon, with all the ancient rites. Father Robert Jones said the funeral mass early in the morning, after which a large concourse of persons, hooded and bearing lighted tapers, preceded the corpse to the burial-place. The ancient offices seem to have been used, for no minister was present, while at the close of the funeral ceremonies, one Lander ventured to predict that mass would soon be said publicly again. — State Papers, Domestic, James I., vol. xiii. 52a, a.d. 1603. Even later than this, public feeling was so strong on the subject of the burial of the dead, that an attempt at excommunication on the part of the minister of AUesmore, near Hereford, was completely defeated by force. It seems that a devout Catholic woman died ; but, as the old rites had been used in her sickness, the minister maintained that she was excommunicated, and could not be interred in the churchyard. The clerk dug a grave, but the minister ordered it to be filled in again. The body remained unburied for more than eight days. At length her neighbours determined to inter the corpse. So they rose early on the appointed day, and with torches, tapers, and the ancient ringing of bells, they boldly went to the churchyard and peacefully effected their object. The minister had appealed to the bishop, w ho sent his officers to take the people into custody ; but the number of Catholic sympathisers so increased, that this was out of the question, and serious riots were feared. — See Treatise on ^litigation, by Robert Parsons. 158 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. again round the stiff body, after which the latter was bound closely with swathings of clean and white linen, with a frill both at head and foot ; then placed on a bier, or sometimes in a parish coffin kept for the purpose, over which during the funeral service a wooden hearse stood, commonly covered with a silken pall. In certain dioceses, as in that of St. David's, already referred to, some young and vigorous bishop — "a mightie proper enemy to the Pope and all his fond and pernicious tromperie " — had done his best to crush out all Catholic customs, and to destroy reverence and decency ; but in others, and specially in that of York, where the wolds were wild, the parishes extensive, and the country population scattered ; and, perhaps, mainly because parsons were scarce, and ministers few in number, — the parish clerk, retaining his old duties, was duly authorised by the Primate of England ^ not only to read the first Lesson, but to monotone the Psalms at mattins and evensong, and to recite the Epistle in the monthly and quarterly service of the Lord's Supper. In some cases, when no minister was to be had, the clerk appears to have churched the women, catechised the children, and buried the dead.- Here and there, especially in certain large towns, well-meant attempts to preserve to the newly-arranged services some kind of order and decency were sometimes made. So long as former traditions survived this was not so impracticable. But such services were not popular ; the churches had fallen into such decay — there were broken windows around, damaged roofs above, and damp pavements beneath — that the people failed to attend them, save under pressure from authority, and fear of punishment for being absent. Thus week-day services ceased, and only Sundays came to be at all observed. For then lists of all absentees were made out by churchwardens and sidesmen, who stood at the chief entrance with ink-horn, pen, and paper, while once a quarter lists were returned to the diocesan authorities. In newly-founded grammar schools, however, and in alms- houses, some kind of prayers, usually a modification of mattins and evensong, were almost always enjoined to be said daily — to the credit of their founders. 1 The clerk, at least, in the diocese of York, was expected to be both able and ready to read distinctly the first Lesson, the PLpistle, and the Psalms, with all the ordinary responses, and to keep the church clean, swept, and sweet. Whether he was ordained at all, and if so by what form, is uncertain. The old clerks had almost always received the four minor orders. — Arch- bishop Grindal's Articles to be Enquired of, etc., A.D. 1571. London: William Serres. * Author's Excerpts and MSS. EUekcr Letters, No. 17. THE NEW "rite" OF CONFIRMATION. 1 59 Loose doctrines continued, at the same time, to be taught with regard to the need and nature of episcopacy. Whatsoever the Pope was believed to maintain as true and necessary, that (whatever it might be) was still openly opposed, caricatured, and condemned. Yet when the ultra-Puritans became potent, those in authority in the Established Church were obliged to shift their ground a little. Bishop Pikington of Durham, for example, remarked : " I agree that James, brother of our Lord, was bishop there at Jerusalem, as the ancient writers testify ; but that he said or did anything like the popish clouted Latin mass, that I utterly deny." ^ Elsewhere the same Protestant authority wrote : — " In all these ages were some that both knew, taught privately, and followed the truth ; though they were not horned and mitred bishops, nor oiled and sworn shavelings to the Pope. Such popish bishops, I am sure, no man is able to prove to have been in every See of this realm continually since the apostles' time, nor elsewhere. When he has proved it, I will say as he does." ^ Confirmation, no longer a sacrament, but only a mere rite,^ in which the subjects confirmed themselves, was then looked upon by the great majority as most probably a work of supererogation, and was in no way appreciated. Hence very few confirmations were held anywhere; for, in truth, nothing approaching a ceremony, unless the queen were the chief subject of it, was now tolerated, much less run after. When apostles could bestow a power of speech to the stammering or stupid, or when to those preaching to strange nations (as some remarked) a special "gift of tongues" was thus imparted, laying on of hands was all very well. But when nothing visible ensued, as was certainly then the case, it became merely an empty and idle ceremony. Long sermons or wearisome "prophesyings," as they were termed, were then all the rage. What were termed ^ Works of Bishop Pilkington, p. 496, Parker Society. London, 1S42. 2 Ibid. p. 59S. ^ "The rite of Confirmation, as I desire to point out, is something aho- gether different to the Sacrajnent of Confirmation. The latter is as old as Christianity, administered both in the East and West ; whereas the former, the ' rite,' was first invented by the English Reformers. It is, as we all know, a service in which persons make a promise in the face of the con- gregation ' to ratify and confirm ' the pledge made on their behalf by their sponsors — a very impressive service; a kind of 'renewal of vows.' But this is not a sacrament, as any bishop of the Established Church would frankly and passionately maintain." — Sermon by the Bishop of Dorchester, O.C.R., reported in the Daily Chronicle, September 1S78. l60 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. "theatrical displays"^ had quite gone out of fashion. When, therefore, Dr. John Uncierhill, in 15S9, was sent to Oxford as bishop, this interesting rite had not been administered for more than a quarter of a century ; - and when an obscure person, named John Jegon, was appointed to the See of Norwich in the spring of 1603, there had been no confirmation in that part of the country for the space of twelve years.^ It was a long time before the people became accustomed to wedded bishops and parsons' wives. Several smitten and insinu- ating prelates who had made offers of marriage to the daughters (jf knights and esquires were cruelly repulsed, and this some- times even when the watchful paterfamilias was himself an innovator, and " most godly and worshipful." Sir John Haring- ton records some notable incidents relating to this subject ; and it is well known that for several generations after the changes under Elizabeth the inferior clergy had to be content with the ])ink-faced and fresh daughters of husbandmen, with "serving- maids," or, as a doubtful alternative, with "ancient widows." When Dr. John Whitgift was Bishop of Worcester (a.d. 1577- 1583), though the revenue of the See was not very great, he always came up to Parliament well attended, — his servants in purple liveries and staves of office, his ambling nag caparisoned with a richly embroidered saddle-cloth, his chimere of new and shining satin, and his lawn sleeves perfectly clean and undarned, — a fashion much gone out, because many of the prelates were so miserly, and consequently so personally shabby ; but one which was greatly liked by the queen.'* It happened one day that Bishop Aylmer of London, meeting His Lordship of Wor- cester with such an orderly troop of attendants, demanded of him how he could afford to keep so many men, upon which Whitgift answered, with a sharp twinkle of the eye and a smile, that it was because he kept so few women. The distracted bishops, pulled hither and thither by contro- versial partisans, were now so troubled by the Puritans that ' " With respect to Confirmation, I do not suppose you approve of the theatrical display which the Papists have admitted among their sacraments. But if those who rightly instructed in the Catechism are admitted to the Lord's Supper with public testimony and imposition of hands (which we know that Christ also practised to young children), I do not see what occa- sion there is fur any one to c[uarrel about it." — Rodolph Gualter to Bishop Cocks, Letter 94, 2nd series Zurich Letters. - This melancholy fact is apparent from documents existing in the Diocesan Registry at Oxford. ^ A Replicacion to an Aniieient Enemy, etc., p. 31. London : Serres. ■' Brief View of the State of the Church of England, by Sir J. liarington, p. S. London, 1C53. ECCLESIASTICAL DISORDERS. l6l formal Injunctions were issued in the summer of 15 71, forbidding reading, praying, preaching, or administering the Sacraments^ in any place, public or private, without licence. This was certainly needed, if anything approaching to order was to be retained ; and was not determined on a day too soon, for the disorder then existing was of so remarkable a kind that, to some, it seemed likely to be subversive of all peace, either in Church or State, and threatened to produce anarchy. A sermon in those days, instead of ending with a devout iormula, often closed amidst controversial expostulations and noisy assertions, and sometimes ended with a free fight. A parsimonious Chelmsford church- warden, ^ who, on one occasion, had provided a certain amount of wine for use at some religious commemoration (let us hope it was a love-feast, and not "the Supper "of the Prayer-Book), had the empty flagon thrown at his head, because he had not supplied sufficient for the spiritual wants of the militant and excited "saints." Such disorders were by no means singular. The Act of Parliament ^ which had been passed in the spring of the year had already gone as far as it was possible to go in conciliating the wandering preachers and communistic prophets. Probably a full third of the beneficed clergy were either (i) only "readers" or old parish clerks; (2) persons who, when abroad, had received a " call " from some of the foreign sects, or who had been "ordered" by a minister ;* (3) persons who had been appointed preachers by the Superintendents of Foreign Protestants in London, Sandwich, Canterbury, Dover, Norwich; and else- where ; or (4) old men who, either in religious houses or as seculars, had, in previous reigns, received minor orders and the office oi the sub-diaconate or diaconate ; or (5) persons who, believing themselves " sent," and wholly repudiating forms and ^ Unless a man could preach fluently without a mnniiscript, ihe Puritan leaders doubted if he were "called," though possibly "ordered." "As for those unlearned one-s, whom you call, neither are they ministers, though you so term them; neither have authority to minister Sacraments,' though you give them power, except they can minister the Word by preaching also."— An Ans'iver to Certain Pieces of a Se)t?ion made at Fanl's Civ7s, by Dr. Cooper, Bishop of Lincoln. London, 1572. 2 77ie Brownists of Chelmsford, etc., by a Congregational Minister, p. 17 Chelmsford, 1821. ^ Statutes, 13 Elizabeth, cap. xii. ■• "One Badam, an old worn out minister of Gloucestershire, deprived of all hvmg by the Superintendent of Ilererord {i.e. John Scory, bishop] foV his lewd conversation, and among the rest/;;- makin-r ministers for money, with- out his lordship's kno wk dge, etc. "—An Aneic nt Editors Note- Book. Library, Stonyhurst College. From this it is clear that an old minister [neither bishop nor priest] simoniacally pretended to make "ministers." L l62 THE CIIUKCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. ceremonies, had never been ordained at all. Inquiries Avhich some of the bishops had carefully made, convinced them clearly enough of the true state of affairs ; and, as it was quite impossible by any existing legal machinery to turn out at least one-third of the persons beneficed, amounting to no less than three thousand, it was clear that what could not be cured must be endured. Complaints had long been made that anybody and everybody who believed himself to be under the guidance of the Spirit/ insisted both on praying and preaching in i)arish churches as well as by market-places and on village greens. Persons of the humblest class, and with no attainments, — some could only read with difficulty, and often stumbled much in reading at all, — came forward on their own authority to curse the religion of their ancestors, with impressive oaths and terrible language; to interpret the mystical imagery of the Apocalypse in a sense "disadvan- tageous to the foreign Bishop of Rome," and at the same time, as some reason for their astounding dogmatism, to maintain the certainty of their own predestination to eternal life, and their sure guidance from on high. As regards " reforms," those already carried out by the Spiritual Governess, Tarker, and Cecil were not worthy of the name. Instead of having had one Pope of old, all the new prelates, as it was maintained, now themselves wanted to be popes ; they wore the outlandish garments of Babylon, fined and persecuted "the saints" (as the Puritans modestly called themselves), cited them to their courts, where legal sharks abounded, and steadily resisted that further "godly reformation," which was still, as they argued, so sorely needed. When Archbishop Parker summoned Sampson and other Puritan leaders to Lambeth, His Grace soon found out how fanatical and disobedient they were, and how entirely exhortations to conformity were contemptuously disregarded. It was determined, therefore, to allow all those who were in ]iossession of benefices— whether ordained or not, and whatever they were, laymen, ministers, or priests — to retain their respective jueferments by simj^le subscription to such of the " Articles of Religion "of 1563 "as only concern the profession of the true Christian faith and the doctrine of the Sacraments." Conditional ordination was never even contemplated. With the same aim, certain words of the twentieth Article, viz. "The Church hath ' Tlic "fanners of l)enelkes" were ([uite content to employ such persons, because tlieir services could be secured for a small payment ; and, conse- quently, seldom inquired about "ordination." The IJishops' Courts, more- over, grantetl all kinds of dispensations, from which considerable fees were received. NEED OF EPISCOPAL ORDINATION. 1 63 power to decree rites and ceremonies, and authority in con- troversies of faith," were somehow omitted in a new edition of these Articles which Jewell, Bishop of Salisbury, had prepared for publication ; and this with the express intention of more effectually smoothing the path of the Puritans, and of avoiding further contests or agitation. Such, however, was never secured. For agitation was still carried on, and contests were more frequent than ever. The large concessions already made to the Puritans were, of course, accepted. And, be it noted, these were no sooner accepted, than fresh agitators began at once to demand further and still greater changes. The chief point, however, which should never be forgotten by those who look back on the past, but of which few are really aware, is that, at the period referred to, the question of the necessity of episcopal ordination was settled, at the distinct suggestion of the bishops themselves, — with the pontifical authority of the Supreme Governess herself, and by and with the consent of Parliament, — in the plain sense of its not being necessary at all. Thus the loose and lawless opinions of Cranmer, Barlow, and Bale concerning ordination were not only commonly current throughout the New Church, but were actually approved and ratified by this new and special enactment; formally confirm- ing those whose ordinations were avowedly questionable, doubtful, or invalid, in the full, free, and peaceable possession of their respective benefices. Were the solemn warnings, let it be here asked, of Bishops Thirlby and Scott, of Abbot Feckenham, and Bishop Watson, uttered in all solemnity on Queen Elizabeth's accession, but utterly disregarded, the warnings of the lawful teachers of the Church of England, — not greatly needed when, in less than twenty years, such a fundamental and complete revolution could have been thus effected ? Alas, for the poor of our crowded cities ! Alas, too, for the poor scattered over the wealds and wolds of our dear old England, robbed thus of their brightest heritage, the faith of their fathers : offered henceforth, in lieu of the promised Bread and a foretaste of the peace up above, only the discordant wranglings of dreary disputants, and — a stone ! What has already and hitherto been set forth will thus serve to show how thoroughly the work of destruction had been done. Not only had the people of England been cruelly cut off from communion wath the rest of Christendom — against the will of a large majority, and obviously without the knowledge of what was being done, on the part of a still larger ; but all religion was 164 THE CHURCH UNUKR QUEEN ELIZABETH. being deliberately corrupted and destroyed/ and all authority weakened. Those who, for their own selfish purposes, had set to work to make a new Church for the English people, may possibly have done their best, in the process of its b^,,ng first planned, then arranged, then manipulated anew, altered again, reformed afresh, and still made dependent, weak, and uninfluential ; but the lesson they all so entirely forgot — a lesson which is more than ever needed at the present day — is that "all power" has been given to the Son of Man on earth as well as in heaven ; that He has mercifully delegated that power to be exercised for the benefit of all races and nations to His One Universal Church, and that no local communion, isolated and apart, can in such sinful isola- tion convey the full benefit of God's royal gifts to any. The authority of prince as well as prelate, indeed, comes from the same divine source — God Almighty; and this is true, though now rejected by those who think themselves wiser than their forefathers. Furthermore, the destruction of one, as the experi- ence of Christians teaches, ensures the certain weakening of the other, and vice versa. It can cause no surprise, consequently, that, when the old and legitimate Christian authority of the Holy See was rudely abolished in England, all authority became weakened ; or that, in due course, it was discovered that the destruction of the altar under Elizabeth had directly led to the overthrow of the throne under Charles I. Putting aside the question of a she-supremacy, the monstrous and impracticable doctrine that children should rule their parents, and subjects their kings ; that a disjointed rabble, excited by godless self- seekers and political fanatics, may lawfully and properly set aside both patriarch and prince, as and when they will, and as often as they like, is a doctrine which, more than any other, has ' As Dr. Mnssman has acutely observed : — "The position taken up by the English Church at the lime of the Reformation was that a national, or local, or particular Church has a right to sit in judgment upon the Church Universal ; that a part of the Church has a right to decide for herself whether or not the doctrines which siie has hitherto held in common with the whole Church Universal arc true or false, and accept them or reject them accordingly ; a right to deciile whether or not the canons of the Church Universal are in accordance with the laws of Christ and His Apostles, and abrogate them, or establish them accordingly ; a right to decide for herself, as against the rest of Christendom, which Sacraments were ordained by Christ, and which were not ; and a right to decide finally what ritual and ceremonies of the Church are lawful and edifying, and so to be retained ; and what, on the other hand, are unlawful and unedifying, and so to be rejected, as tending to superstition and idolatry to be abhorred of all faithful Christians." — The Keys of the Kingdom of llcavcii: a Sermon. London, 1S79. CONSEQUENCES OF SIXTEENTH-CENTURV CHANGES. 1 65 tended to bring about that alternate disorder, confusion, mis- trust, and revolution by which the once-Christian nations of Europe are now in these latter years of civilisation, culture, and progress, periodically cursed. The most influential modern Evangel is obviously the gospel of the Gatling-gun — the glad tidings of fire, sword, and force. The so-called "progress" of once Christian races turns out to be only the impressive progress of a crab — their culture, a mere knowledge of how to pamper the body, paganise the mind, corrupt the conscience, and starve the immortal soul. CHAPTER VI. The action wliich had been taken at Rome produced one direct effect, viz. that the persecution of those who clung to the old religion became at once more merciless, bitter, and unrelenting. While some few persons endeavoured to escape the penalties imposed by occasionally going to the new services, the large majority resolutely and firmly declined to do so. As regards the old clergy, " Queen Mary's priests," as they were still called, some notoriously conformed in the hope of another change, or possibly in order to have greater liberty and licence. Others, however, stood firm unto the very end, living and dying in the faith of their forefathers. Of the former an acute writer thus remarks: "When punish- ments are inflicted on the one hand, and considerable advantages offered on the other; when non-compliance is attended with bitter sufferings, and temporising encouraged with rewards, a sudden change in matters of religion is justly ascribed either to the fear of the one or hope of the other. And this was the case from the very beginning of Queen Elizabeth's Reformation. Oreat numbers of the inferior clergy who came over to it were frightened into a compliance, and taught to conform by the sufferings of others. They saw their bishops imprisoned, and all those of their own rank who had refused the Oath of Supremacy turned out of their livings and reduced to beggary. So that they had no other choice left but either to conform or starve, having nothing but their benefices to depend upon for a livelihood. A terrible tem[)tation to those who are not armed with virtue strong enough to undergo a lingering martyr- dom ! ]jut the greatest part were ])revailed upon by the ]jo\verful charms of liberty and ease. Tor, besides the liberty they were sure to enjoy of gratifying their incontinence, as the effect soon showed, the queen had by the plenitude of her ecclesiastical power contrived such a commodious Reformation for them that, if they would but conform, they should keep their rUNISIIMENT OF THOSE HOLDING THE OLD FAITH. 1 6/ benefices, and at the same time be eased of the most painful part of the duties annexed to them."^ Of the CathoHc laity by far the greater number had deliber- ately declined to attend the new services. Enactment had been added to enactment, statute to statute, but all in vain. They could not conform. Their consciences were altogether against it. The new religion, made only a few years ago, was certainly not from God. The new ministers had no i)roper ordination, and many of them no ordination at all. One contradicted another, and all was confusion ; while the new doctrines were heretical or erroneous. They, therefore, would not conform.^ Hence they lay at the mercy of their enemies. At any moment they might be arrested and hurried off before the appointed courts to be interrogated on oath as to whether or not they had been to church, where, when, and how often they had received the Lord's Supper, and whether they held the parson's written certificate that this had been publicly done. If not, they were condemned as recusants to fines and imprisonment ; and if, having previously communicated, they had repented of the act and been reconciled by some priest, they forfeited their lands and goods, and were liable to be confined in prison for life. Thus, to say mass, as well as to hear mass, was a crime. To receive a confession, as well as to make a confession, was the same. To teach the Catholic faith as brought hither by St. Augustine, or to be taught it, was the like. To know that a priest was at a certain place, and not to seize or betray him, was a crime. To give him food, shelter, or money was also a crime. To remain away from the services of the desolate and ruined churches was a crime ; torture, imprisonment, and death were the punishments. So that the rack and gibbet and the gallows were in constant requisition ; while the prisons and the dungeons were choked with innocent victims.-^ Elizabeth's Inquisition, for such it was, was empowered to exercise an absolute control over men's opinions, and to punish 1 Englamrs Conversion and Reformation Compared, p. 260. Antwerp, 1725- . ... ^ The above is duly and e.xactly paraphrased from replies to the inquiries of the Commissioners, of whom Grindal was one. ■' " Of our late persecution in general it is so extreme as the like was never. All prisons are full of all sorts, old and young men, wives, widows and maids. It is not enough to use all allegiance by way of protestation ; unless they can get one to renounce the Pope and comer with the ministry ; or else to be com- mitted and indicted for £zo by the month, and all further misery to be inflicted that they can possibly devise." — Tiie Troubles of our Catliolic Fore- fathers, 3rd series, p. 50. London, 1877. 1 68 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. all according to the discretion of its members. Ordinary evidence might be received in the ordinary manner ; but torture and imprisonment (what these were will be soon seen in detail) were likewise to be used whensoever thought necessary. Thus this hypocritical woman, aided by men like Cecil and Walsing- ham, the bishops and the judges, as well as the ordinary justices of the peace,^ punished in a most barbarous manner persons absolutely guiltless of any crime whatsoever, and this by punish- ments hitherto reserved for the most dark and deadly crimes. But the tyranny of inflicting fines for recusancy, i.e. for declin- ing to attend the new services, was the most tyrannical. If persons honestly and conscientiously believed that attendance thereat involved the sin of apostacy (and most of their religious teachers so taught them), surely their consciences were not to be forced by such odious laws. But bribery had then become a science ; the bribed were exceedingly numerous, and money with which to reward them was notoriously scarce. Hence this plan of fines was cleverly adopted. Old families paid them ; upstarts and time-servers received them. The actual punishment for refusing to attend the queen's new services was no less than twenty pounds a lunar month, or about two hundred and fifty pounds a year; which, according to the value of money in the present day, would be equivalent to an annual fine of three thousand two hundred and fifty pounds per annum. Hoards and children's marriage-portions, put by year by year from the time of their birth, thus soon decreased, and subsequently vanished. Numbers of noblemen and gentlemen endured this tyranny, and anxiously endeavoured to pay these demands, so long as their property enabled them to do so, by selling their estates (and this, of course, by forced sales and at great dis- advantage) ; but if at any time the fines were in arrears, a statute recently passed authorised the immediate seizure of all their personal property in addition, together with two-thirds of their real estates every six months, so long as the arrears were unpaid. Sometimes an annual composition was received instead ; but this was regarded by Elizabeth and her ministers as a great favour. Thus, under this woman's disastrous rule, the Catholic gentle- ' A justice of llic peace was delined as "an animal, who, for half-a-dozen chickens, would dispense wiih a dozen laws " (Sir .Simon D'Ewes' ynpion, by Richard Simpson. London, 1867 A model biography and a mine of information regarding Elizabeth's reign. 192 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. summer, and losing no time in beginning their work, before the Christmas feast came round, had reconciled to the Church of their fathers many who had lapsed. They acted in the spirit and I)urport of the Bull of Pope Pius V. For, as some might have asked themselves, if, in such a matter, the Father of Christendom could not speak with authority, who could ? If he was not to be obeyed, to whom was obedience due? If His Holiness was unable to devise a remedy for the sorrows of England, to whom should the afflicted turn ? In the work of Parsons and Campion, friends aided them with zeal and devotion. So that they preached by pre-arrangement at different places, and exhorted with all diligence and earnestness various gatherings of sincere adherents and followers. Men of great gifts and of the highest culture, their influence began to be widely experienced at once ; they always found an attentive audience, and seldom passed on to some other place without obvious results from their labours. In August of this year Parsons wrote his celebrated Challenge, which, having been made public by an esquire of Hampshire named Thomas Pounde, soon secured a circulation throughout the whole kingdom. At Stonor Park, about five miles to the north of Henley, in Oxfordshire, a family of antiquity and repute had long resided — the Stonors. They were earnestly attached to the ancient faith. In the attractive and interesting picture gallery, which runs from east to west on the north side of their pleasantly-placed mansion, are various representations of those of many generations who have always been leal and loyal to the faith of their forefathers. In the adjoining church, standing towards the east of the house, mass has been constantly said without break or discontinuance down to the present day. In that sacred edifice no abomination of desolation has ever been set up. There, under the protection of an influential family, in a house placed towards the lower slope of a hill, away from main roads, and amid the shelter of beechen woods. Parsons was allowed to set up a private printing-press. One volume after another was put forth, being sold at Oxford as well as in London ; each book full of wholesome truths for the innovators, and telling arguments for the deluded and misled in general. The authorities were beside themselves with anger and annoyance at being unable to unearth the offenders or discover the press. Spies and agents were despatched to secure them. Parsons, who had been appointed one of the members of the Spanish ambassador's household, had his headquarters in London. But Campion, after moving about discreetly for some TORTURE OF CAMPION. I93 months, betrayed by one, George Elliot,^ was taken in the house of Esquire Yates, at Lyford, in Berkshire, on Sunday, July i6th, 1 58 1, just after he had preached to a congregation of nearly sixty listeners, a considerable proportion of whom were young students of the University of Oxford. Eyford House was then a turreted and moated building of some antiquity, — a county family's pleasant home, — in which several carefully-arranged hiding-places existed. Elliot had himself been a servant at Ingatestone Hall in Essex, and at Orpington in Kent, but was then a government spy, on active duty; and, knowing one of the servants at Lyford, entered into conversation with him at the gate of the drawbridge. Elliot's recent apostacy and infamous character were quite un- known to the servant, who admitted him to mass, and informed him in confidence that Campion would preach. The latter was taken in due course, at once given over to the care of the Sheriff of Berks, and carried through Abingdon, Reading, and Coln- brooke to London. There he was committed to the Tower. Both the Lord Chancellor and the Lieutenant of the Tower tried to induce him to betray his allies and friends. But he declined. So within a week he was placed upon the rack, and endured its tortures. To quote from a contemporary authority : — ■ " At his first racking they went no farther with him ; but afterwards, when they saw that he could not be won to condescend somewhat at least in religion, which was the thing they most desired, they thought good to frame matter of treason against him, and framed their demands accordingly ; about which he was so cruelly torn and rent upon the torture, the two last times, that he told a friend of his that found means to speak to him, that he thought they meant to make him away in that manner. Before he went to the rack he used to fall down at the rack-house door, upon both knees, to commend himself to God's mercy ; and upon the rack he called continually upon God, repeating often the holy name of Jesus. He most charitably forgave his tormentors and the causers thereof. His keeper, asking him the next day how he felt his hands and feet, he answered not ill, because not at all." - Some controversies were held with him in the chapel of the Tower by certain ministers. " That he might want no good ^ .See a document in the handwriting of this man, amongst the Lansdowne MSS., British Museum, Buri;hLy Papers, vol. xxxiii. Pluto, folio 16 et seq., endorsed "10 Aug. 1581. A declaracon of certain Papists, etc., writ by G[eorge] E[lliot] is by one that was servant to the old Ladye Peter." - From an old Latin MS. sometime at Douay, written by an eye-witness of Campion's death, and quoted in Memoirs of Missionary Priests, by Bishop Challoner. N 194 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. l)retence to yield to their desires," it is written, "■ they often brought to him such divines as they had to confer with him, and to persuade him privately to relent somewhat to their sect." But this was of no avail. Though worn widi agony and weak wMth racking — so weak that his numbed arms hung by his side, and he could not stand — he was quite able to give an ansvver to the worrying and wearying divines. He would not succumb, and did not give in. Having been deliberately allowed to recover a little, the authorities proceeded to rack him a third time ; so that when, three weeks later, he was put on his trial for high treason, he was positively unable, according to custom when charged, even to lift up his hand. Seven persons were arraigned with Campion, and like him were condemned to die. He thus spake : — " I protest before God and the holy angels, before heaven and earth, before this world and the bar whereat I stand, that I am not guilty of any ])art of the treason contained in the indictment, or of any other treason whatsoever." liut the jury, having been informed by Popham, the Attorney- (jcneral, that " it was the queen's will that the prisoners should be found guilty," did as they were told. On December ist, 1581, he, in company with Alexander ]5riant and Ralph Sherwin, were executed at Tybourne, with all the ordinary horrors. A relation of Campion's was informed by the Lieutenant of the Tower that if Campion could be induced to go over to the (jueen's religion, he should not only receive a pardon, but obtain "an office worth ;^ioo by the year"; and when Campion was preparing to suffer, a like offer is said to have been made by Sir i'rancis Knollys. A minister who wished Campion to join in jjvayer received this ansvver : — " You and I are not of one religion. I i)ray )ou, therefore, content yourself, and leave me alone. I bar no one of prayer ; but, for myself, I desire only them of the liousehold of faith to pray with me, and, in my agony, I wish to know only one Creed." The end was of the usual kind. The details of this tragedy were like those which had been done before and should so Ireciuently be done after. The three sufferers were drawn on a hurdle to Tybourne ; they were then hung and cut down alive. They were at once dismembered and disembowelled ; their heads were taken off and their bodies (juartered, and these were first thrown into a caldron of boiling water, and afterwards smeared THE TIIIMBLEBYS OF LINCOLNSHIRE. 1 95 over with pitch, before being exposed on poles in different parts of London. The following four verses, in modern spelling, are given of a rare and beautiful " Epitaph " by Henry Walpole : — " His prison now the City of the King, His rack and torture joys and heavenly bliss, For men's reproach with angels he doth sing A sacred song, which everlasting is. For shame but short, and loss of small renown, He purchased hath an ever-during crown. " His quartered limbs shall join with joy again, And rise a body brighter than the sun, Your malice keen tormented him in vain. For every wrench such glory hath him won. And every drop of blood, \\-hich he did spend. Hath reap'd a joy which never shall have end. " His hurdle draws us with him to the Cross, His speeches theie provoke us for to die, His death doth say this life is but a loss. His martyred blood from heaven to us doth cry : His first and last, and all conspire in this — To show the way that leadelh us to bliss. " Blessed be God, Which lent him so much grace, Thanked be Christ, Which blest this martyr so ; Happy is he, which seeth his Master's Face ; Cursed all they that thought to work him woe : Bound en be we to give eternal praise To Jesu's Name, which such a man did raise." ^ A melancholy incident relating to the Thimbleby femily of Lincolnshire must now be recorded. Their ancestors had been seated at Pelham since the reign of Edward III., and were a knightly family of honour and good repute. One of them, in prison at Lincoln, a.d. 15S1, for refusing to attend the new services, and for declining to receive at the Supper, desired greatly to see his young wife, likely soon to become a mother. His request was allowed by Thomas Cowper, the bishop of the chocese. But, as her name was amongst a list of those un- favourable to the " reformed " faction, when she was admitted to her husband's cell, she herself, under some order from authority, was actually detained by force. Either the shock of this act of perfidious inhumanity, or the frightful stench of the place, brought on sickness and premature labour; and, in her ^ The original is reprinted verbatim in Dr. Jessopp's most interesting Memoir of Henry Walpole, entitled One Generation of a Norfolk House, pp. 106-110. London, 1879. 196 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. hour of weakness, in the presence of her helpless and distracted husband, she was cruelly denied by the gaoler the assistance of any matron. It seems probable that her husband, Gabriel Thinibleby, died in prison. Probably a speedy death mercifully ended her own sufferings. But to return to the north-west. In the early part of 1583, at the Sessions held before Chaderton, Bishop of Chester, in con- junction with John Byron, three old priests, Williamson, Hatton, and Bell, were indicted for high treason ; and no less than twenty-six persons were each fined two hundred and forty ])ounds because they had not attended the new services for at least twelve months. Of these one was a knight, — Sir John Southworth, a most determined and noble confessor, of the faith, of whom another prelate, Grindal, could make nothing satis- iactory to him, — four were esquires, three were gentlemen, ten were priests, three were schoolmasters, and the rest yeomen, husbandmen, and labourers. Four women, though indicted, were not arraigned, and seven other women appear to have escaped.^ Thirty-eight, however (including six women), were speedily lodged in Salford Gaol. Tiie offence of each was that he or she conscientiously refused to have anything to do with the new religion, its obligations, its authors, or its authorities. In the meantime the new prelates and the newly -made ministers, so soon as they were consecrated or ordained, appear to have sought out wives for themselves as a consolation in their loneliness. It must, of course, have been very depressing to have lived alone, year after year, in out-of-the-way villages, with little to study but the Marty rology of Foxe, Jewell's Apology, and the two books of published Homilies. Such reading was, no doubt, rather "painful" than profitable. Wives, therefore, when they could secure them, served to take up their attention, while the prattle of children amused them. It is astonishing, consequently, how successful they became in this very practical part of their dutv. Dr. Cotton's lady of Salisbury presented him from time to time with no less than nineteen. The bishop's chapel was often turned into a nursery; the parson's wife was fruitful as the vine on the vicarage wall, and often more blessed with olive- branches than the neighbouring squire's or the parish constable's ; l)ishops left their daughters handsome portions, often secured knighthood for their sons,'-' and the children of the clergy were in due course looked upon as respectable members of society. ' Slate Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. clxvii. No. 40. Dated in dorso, lanuaiy 22, 23, 1583. - Two o.*" the sons of Sandys, Archbishop of York, were knighted, viz. BISHOP THOMAS WATSON. 197 In those days even the oldest prelates, though wanting in certain gifts, were bold and not bashful. For example, Thomas Ciodwin,' already a widower, Bishop of Bath and Wells, and "aged and diseased, and lame of the gout," as Sir John Har- ington puts on record, married as his second spouse a widow from London, not one of the " ancient widows " already noticed, but one "livelier and right merrie." It reached the queen's ears that this wrinkled and dilapidated old man, with one foot in the grave, had indeed wedded a girl of twenty ; and Her Highness, invariably meditating on matrimony in some form or another, called him a " bigamist," and expressed the greatest indignation. Upon which the Earl of Bedford, who happened to be near and knew the lady, said merrily, and with much dry humour : " Madam, I know not how much the woman is above twenty ; but I know that a son of hers is a little under forty." But this rather marred than mended matters. One other bystander remarked : '•'■ Majits peccahun habei.''' Another, to the cjueen's amusement, for it was the single topic always welcome, told methodically of three sorts of marriage. First, that of God's making, when Adam and Eve, two young folks, were coupled ; secondly, of man's making, when one is old and another young, as St. Joseph's marriage ; and thirdly, of the devil's making, when two old folks marry,- not for comfort, but for covetousness, and such they said was Bishop Godwin's. In the autumn of 1584, Thomas Watson, Bishop of Lincoln, the last survivor in England of the ancient episcopate, and a marked contrast to the amorous old gentleman just referred to, after a close imprisonment of nearly a quarter of a century, four years of which were passed in Wisbeach Castle, passed to his rest and reward. He had seen sixty-eight summers, and had long suffered from the ague. No passing-bell was rung from the adjoining tower of St. Peter's Church, then in the hands of the new preachers. His life had been one continued series of trials ever since Elizabeth's accession.-* At Wisbeach his lordship was Sir Edwin by Elizabeth, and Sir Miles. Each of these, though laymen, had been respectively made Prebendaries of York Minster for the sake of the endowments. The latter received the honour of knighthood in the first year of King James I. 1 Consecrated Bishop of Bath, etc., at Lambeth, September 13, 15S4. - Brief View of tlie Church of England, by Sir J. Harington, pp. 114, 115. London, 1653. '" The bishop was placed there, at Lord Burghley's suggestion, in 1580. — State Papers, Elimbeth, Addenda, vol. xxvii. No. 21. In Father Parsons' Accottnt of the Persecution (p. 60, A.D. 1582), he describes the scandalous KjS THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. insulted by the Protestants in the grossest and most infamous manner.^ Trusty friends were sometimes enabled to let him know, wherever confined, of the downward course of events throughout the country, and of the miserable religious desolation existing — a desolation which he was so powerless to alter. The seasons came and went during his last imprisonment ; but for him there had been little change. Seed-time and harvest were alike. During the Avinter the sea-mists, drifting landwards, almost always hung over and hid the castle walls. Broad pools and patches of stagnant water, green with rank weeds, and wide marshes and sterile flats lay outspread all around for miles. The muddy river Nene w'as constantly overflowing its broken-down banks, so that the moat of the castle frequently flooded the adjacent garden and orchard. Of foliage, save a few stunted willow trees, there was little or none in sight; for when summer came round, the sun's heat soon parched up the rank grass in the courtyard, and withered the dandelion and snapdragon which grew upon its massive but dilapidated walls. ^ It was a dreary spot,'"* rife with the saddest memories ; where, during half a life- treatment which the imprisoned were then receiving; being deprived of all their books, and kept in separate rooms ; not being allowed any intercourse whatsoever, except at table. The Bishop of Ely, as may be seen from a letter to the Privy Council from Carleton and Michel, the keepers of the castle, '•halh appointed a preacher unto the recusants, a man of holy life, learned, and able to give an account of his doctrine strongly." — Sfa^e Papers, J)o/nest!c, Queen Elizabeth, vol. cxliii. No. 17. To have pestered them with the modern heresies, over and above their imprisonments, was adding insult to injury. ' It may be gathered from an original letter still remaining in the Record Office, written by a Catholic prisoner in the Tower in 1581, that the bishop was subject to an insult almost incredible. "Not many days since," the account runs, " an infamous woman, the tool of some ruffians, was introduced into the chamber of the Bishop of Lincoln (who remains still in prison at Wisbeach), and dared in the most shameless way to solicit to sin that most lioiy man, worn out as he is with cruel treatment. When the old man, with all ills mis^ht, endeavoured to drive the impure beast from his cell,' her evil instigators, who awaited the result, even threatened him with blows." — Slate Papers, Donii'stic, Elizabeth, vol. cxlix. n. 61. - "The building, which covered two acres of land, stood in the midst of four other acres, at the boundary of which was a strong high wall, and on the outside next the town was a ditch or moat, forty feet wide ; and there was no way to the castle but by a drawbridge in the west front. The great tower was the residence of the constaJjle or governor. Underneath were dismal dark vaults for the continement of prisoners, which made this tower sometimes be called the keep or dungeon. In this building was the ^reat hall." — Historical Account of the Ancient Tdon and Port of Wisbeach, by William Watson, Esq., F.S.A., pp. 123-129. Wisbeach, 1827. •' P'ather Weston thus writes concerning this jirison : — "When we reachetl it \i.c. Wisbeach Castle] we were divided and sent into separate rooms, WISBEACII CASTLE. 1 99 time, several martyrs and confessors of the faith continued to suffer in humiUty and patience, waiting for the breaking of a better day, doing God's will, and longing for their promised crown.' wherein we lived day and night under bolts and locks, excepting at the hours of dinner and supper, and half an hour before and after our meal, when we could breathe the air and walk about a little. This was a public prison, common to all the thieves and criminals, and situated within the enclosure of the bishop's palace. It stood upon a high terrace, and water filled a moat all around it. Everything, however, at that time was ruinous and dilapidated, particularly through the rapacity and avarice of the heretical prelates ; who, not caring for posterity, and only mindful of their own convenience, had de=;poiled the building of its best material, selling the lead off the roof, the beam*;, the iron, and the glass, and thus abandoning the other parts to ruin and decay." — Life of IVilliani Weston, p. 239. London, 1875. ^ The Burials' Register contains only four words — "John Watson, doctor, sepultus" ; and in this entry "John" is a mistake for "Thomas." There \>i no stone to mark his grave, nor any memorial whatsoever. As early as the year 1748, the Rev. W. Cole carefully searched for one, but in vain. — See Cole's ALSS., Brit. Mus., vol. xviii. folio 90. Dr. Christopher Wordsworth, sometime Bishop of Lincoln, courteously informed me that there is no portrait of his illustrious predecessor, either at Riseholme or Lincoln. CHAPTER VII. The first prisoner sent to W'isbeach Castle for refusing to adopt the reforming policy was John Feckenham, O. S.B., the last Abbot of Westminster. He was a prelate of great learning, of most virtuous life, and of much kindness of heart. During Queen Mary's reign he is reported^ to have frequently befriended the Lady Elizabeth ; but when the latter came to the throne, and he found that she contemplated setting up a new religion, and becoming its Supreme Governess, he spoke out with the greatest plainness of language. Notwithstanding this, it is said that at her accession she felt disposed to offer him the vacant Arch- bishopric of Canterbury, if he would only take the Oath of Suj)remacy, and co-operate with her and her advisers in making a new national religion ; but this he firmly refused to do. Soon after this he had been sent to the Tower; then he was placed in the custody of Home, Bishop of Winchester ; subsequently he was sent back to the Tower by Elizabeth, then to the Marshalsea, and at last to ^V^isbeach, where he died in the twenty-seventh year of that queen's reign, having thus been a prisoner for conscience' sake during the long period of more than a quarter of a century.'^ Allusion has already been made to the cruelties practised on such prisoners. One of the most daring and impudent acts of the innovators was to provide a minister of the new religion to ] (reach at, and argue with, those in confinement at Wisbeach ; and then make these poor sufferers pay his stipend and find him in food. Bishop Richard Cocks, apparently, was the ingenious gentleman who devised and carried out this brilliant idea ; but though one man may take a horse to the trough, twenty cannot ^ See Anthony a Wood's Atlieiue Oxonicnsis, vol. i. p. 222 ; and Sta/e Papeis, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. cxxxi. n. 48, and vol. cxliii. n. 17. * The sin of which, in the eyes of Queen Elizabeth's Council, this noble confessor, in conjunction with Heath, Watson, and Tunstall, had been guilty, was maintaining the independence of the spiritualty : nothing else. He refused to give to Caesar the things of God. '•200 THE WORTHINGTONS OF WORTIIINGTOxV. 201 make it imbibe the water, and so in practical effect this beneficial scheme fell flat, and failed of its purpose, as the following letter so graphically sets forth : — • " The Lord Bishop hath appointed a preacher unto the recusants — a man of holy life, learned, and able to give an account of his doctrine strongly. The men restrained, before us both and others, have been called divers times and as often required to hear the preacher, and abide the prayer; but they all with one voice generally, and after that every man particularly answering for himself, denied to allow either, saying that as they are not of oiir Church, so they will neither hear, pray, nor yet confer with any of us of any matters concerning religion."^ Even children at this period were not exempt from persecu- tion. Four Lancashire youths of birth and rank, Worthingtons of Worthington, were seized and sorely tried, with a view of getting them to betray their relatives and friends. ^ A pursuivant, accompanied by the under-sheriff of the county and twenty javelin men, seized them at the house of their friend. Esquire Sankey of Great Sankey, near Warrington, on February 12th, 1584. They were at once examined as to the whereabouts of their uncle. Father Thomas AVorthington, a priest whose life had been marked by devotion and self-denial. They were asked when they had last seen him, when they had attended mass, and where ; but little information was obtained from them. The two eldest, therefore (neither then sixteen years of age), were taken before the Bishop of Chester and the Earl of Derby, but without any result. On their second examination the two younger were likewise brought up with their brothers. One of the former was not yet twelve years of age. The unusual nature of the proceed- ings attracted a crowd interested and attentive. It appears that on the appointed examination day the guards had intentionally kept the children without any food at all until the evening, when they were plied with wine, so as to half stupefy them, and render them possibly more talkative and probably easier to be dealt with and entrapped. One of them at once complained to the Commissioners of this treatment. "They had evidently intended to deprive me of my mind by '^George Carleton and Humphrey Michel to the Privy Council. — Slate Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. cxliii. n. 17. - The account in the text, much abbreviated, is taken from the second part of the Addenda to Bridgewater's edition of John Gibbons' Coincrlatio Ecclesice Cath. in Anglia, etc. Treves, 1594. See also Slate Papers, Domestic, Elizabetii, vol. cxc. n. 25, dated "June 12, 1586"; Prisoners in the Gate House ; and Strype's Annals, vol. iii. p. 420. 202 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. g'ving me strong drink ! " he exclaimed ; "but by God's goodness they have altogether failed, lor my mind is quite clear, though my body be in sore pain. I am, therefore, unable to appear before your honours as I should do." They were all examined, however, on subjects of their religion, and every endeavour made to find out their uncle's whereabouts, and to make them betray their friends and criminate themselves. Lord Derby, partly by threats and partly by promises, having offered to make the eldest youth his page of honour, if he would only consent to attend the new services, was unable to obtain the information wanted, or to effect his desired object. Nor was the bishop more succes'^ful. Consequently these four children were at once imprisoned in Manchester, and told that as they were guilty of high treason they would be duly punished for it. An officer of the bishop. Bull by name, was commissioned by his lordship to take them in hand at once. They were then confined in the House of Correction. So, dragging the eldest out of bed one morning, he administered to him, in his brothers' presence, a severe and cruel flogging with several ash rods. But this was of no avail ; neither he nor the others, as they declared, would go to the "services of the Calvinists." They were con- sequently taken thither and to sermons by force ; but this policy only sickened them more. Neither threats nor bribes in the long run sufficed ; and though the bishop attempted to bribe them to conform, he utterly failed. They were true to their fathers' faith ; and two of them, it appears, went abroad ami were subsequently ordained. Prior to that event, however, they seem to have been again secured by the authorities in London, on the plea that they were about to be sent abroad by their relations to be educated and made priests. Their uncle was taken by Topcliffe at Islington,^ who reported him to Burghley and the Privy Council to have been eminently "wilful, perverse, and arrogant." This, of course, was the character given to all who were resolute in declining to co-operate with the innovators, — as regards the upper classes at that period only a considerable minority. At the visitation of Corringham, in Lincolnshire, on the 8th of April 1566, three altar-stones had been taken down, two of which were used as pavement for the church, and the other was sold to Mr. Topcliffe. This person, it appears, is the "Richard Topcliffe" just referred to, who so frightfully persecuted the "recusants" and " seminary priests." He belonged, apparently, ' Thomas Worthington was taken at the house of Mr. Richard a Wood of Islington, an ancestor of the celebrated historian of the University of Oxford. TOPCLIFFE OF LINCOLNSHIRE. 203 to an old family of the country,^ and had himself married a daughter of Sir Edward Willoughby. In the female line he was descended from the ancient Yorkshire families of Waterton and Fairfax. He had been brought up a Catholic, and had not only apostatised, but become one of the cruellest and most shameful persecutors, and a rack master. It is melancholy enough to see the " new men," ready tools of the authorities, taking an active part in overthrowing the old religion ; but ignorance and fana- ticism often go hand in hand, and when self-seeking is a man's sole aim, little good ensues ; but here was a case in which a Lincolnshire gentleman of blood and family, having renounced the faith of his fathers, became, step by step, the supple tool of his inferiors, and at last a merciless, degraded, and disgraced ruffian. Bishop Cocks of Ely, Berkeley of Bath, and Davies of St, David's, had died in 1581 ; Grindal, Archbishop of Canterbury, two years afterwards; Watson of Winchester in 1584; Barnes, Bishop of Durham,- in 1587 ; and Sandys, Archbishop of York, in 1588. Thus the leading and more active innovators, one after another, were called away to their last account. The persons who succeeded them were, as a rule, singularly commonplace in their characters. The single theologian of the Reformation- era, John Jewell, had not made any great impression at Salisbury, where the ordinary religious desolation, so current generally, was likewise experienced. All this time the poor complained constantly of the unjust manner in which they were oppressed, and of the difficulty m ^ English Church Furniluye, e/c, edited by E. Peacock, F.S.A., p. 62. London, 1866. ■^ The following account of this man, who was consecrated Suffragan Bishop of Nottingham by Thomas Young, Archbishop of York, on March 9, 1567, translated to Carlisle in 1570, and to Durham in 1577, and died August 24th, 1587, is given by a contemporary: — "Richard Barnes, an apostata priest, tuice married, a common drunkard, Bishop of Durham, accustomed to drink seven times every meal, and as many between meals, every draught containing a pint ; and in his Public Consistory to offenders, accustomed to use most obscene and filthy words, fell at length with intemperance into a fever, and so into a frenzy. One night as he was about to rise out of his bed, he fell out of his bed, and was like to have broken his neck ; but for that time and with great difficulty recovered. Soon after, his disease brought him to his last exigent, when, as past speech, Toby Matthew, willing him in sign of his faith to hold up his hands, he always held his fingers to his mouth, which one, Ralph Hilton, his base [born] son, marking [it] swore, and said Mr. Dean did mistake his father, for that his finger to his mouth did desire nothing but drink. And so de^perately he died, and was buried the next night at midnight." — An Ajuioit Editor s Note-Book, MS., Stony- hur^L College. 204 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. keeping body and soul together. Petty tyranny amongst in- terior officials was rampant, for which, too frequently, there was neither remedy nor redress. Anciently the great nobles had stood between the Crown and the people ; so that while the former could not oppress those under them, the latter were in no great danger of being oppressed, for their local lord was their patron, friend, and protector. The natural and proper rights of all classes were thus safe from the power of any single passionate or wayward ruler. • For generations the influence and independence of the greater noblemen, supported by their considerable wealth arising from broad lands ; and the personal devotion of their faithful retainers, had always been a valuable check upon regal tyranny. Dukes and earls in their own localities had long been as little kings. Standing alone, they were strong ; when in combination with others, they were stronger. When, however, it was seen how under Henry VIII. such exalted and powerful noblemen had been so easily ruined and brought to the block by this tyrant, the nobility in general, as a class or "estate," began to lose their ancient legitimate prestige ; the local poor their natural protectors ; and thus regal tyranny,^ fostered by a few needy adventurers without either conscience or principle, became practically unchecked and rampant in their revolutionary changes, arbitrary deeds, and cruel punishments. Two boys of the town of Wisbeach, born of poor parents, likewise suffered, Thomas and George Fisher by name. They had been admitted to the castle to attend upon the prisoners as servitors. Naturally clever and observant, by degrees tliey each became greatly influenced by what they heard and saw. The old religion, as so many persons quietly and privately main- tained, was a strong and remarkable contrast to the new, and though these youths had been brought up under the latter, in no long time they became sincerelv attached to the former ; and, at their own request, were carefully instructed in its tenets and ^ As Canon Barry remarked in his recent Lcdiircs on the Kcfonnalion : — " From 1485 onwards the Royal power in Entjland grachially became despotic under torm of law. The Tudor despotism was a despotism exercised as it were with the consent of the people. They began to look at the king as having a sacred character ; they accepted him as a centre of national uidiy, and came to reverence him as ' the Lord's anointed.' The Royal jiower became a very formidable thing. The same thing occurred in other parts of Europe, especially in France, Germany, and Spain. Monarchial power was on the increase, and rallied round it a strong national sjirit everywhere. As yet it was England in alliance with the papal power, or observing an armed neutrality. But a conflict was at any moment likely." (A.U. 1879.) THOMAS AND GEORGE FISHER. 20$ duties. This being reported to the governor, offended him greatly, who, on a certain day when a sermon was to be preached in the parish church " by a painful and weighty minister," com- manded them both, as a test, to be present at its delivery. But, in respectful language, they asked to be excused. They would rather not go. They had recently learned what the religion of their fathers was, and, if they might be allowed to make choice, they preferred it to that now set up. The governor became furious. Was ever such insolence and heresy known, and from two boyish knaves? As a punishment they were stripped to the waist, and publicly flogged in the market- place, in the presence of a large concourse of people, and then put into irons. Being subsequently set free, the eldest escaped abroad, and became a student at the college at Douay. But the younger, on a certain occasion, was found serving one of the old priests at mass, and was imprisoned in company with some of the worst and most depraved criminals. At length he was brought to trial, accused of being an ignorant recusant, and upbraided by the magistrates for being so fooHsh and for bringing so much misery upon himself and his parents. "It is true that I am very ignorant about many things," he replied ; " but of this one thing I am quite certain, notwith- standing my ignorance, that the Catholic faith is the only faith for salvation, and that it is a deal older, by many cen- turies, than your new religion." " How can you, an ignorant boy, know which is the oldest religion, or anything about it?" asked the magistrate. "Why, in this way, sir," the youth replied; "your own chroniclers, your own ministers, admit as much. Holinshed, who must have known, says so." The magistrate denied that the writer in question had admitted anything of the sort, replying : "You lie, sirrah !" Upon this the youth triumphantly drew out from his breast- pocket a single leaf of the "Chronicles" of Holinshed, and presented it to the official. It contained a description of the coming hither of St. Augustine, with litanies. Catholic prayers, silver cross, and pictured banner, and had been given to him by one of the prisoners at Wisbeach, as evidence of the antiquity of the old religion — a leaf which might be judiciously produced when it was required. The youth himself, being poor and unable to pay fines, appears to have been dismissed with a warning. In the year 1576 the Commons had petitioned the queen "to amend the discipline of the Church,' ^vhich had fallen into a 2o5 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. state of great uncertainty and laxness. In fact, nothing could well have been worse than it was. l"he disorganisation in every diocese was complete and perfect. P^verybody wished to govern, and declined to obey. Presbyters looked upon them- selves as rulers, called synods, appointed fast-days, and ordained other presbyters.^ In fact, every one did as he liked. The ecclesiastical courts were sinks of jobbery and iniquity, farmed by persons who paid for their offices, — handing over a yearly sum to the authorities who had let them out to the highest bidder, — and then worked them to their own profit and ad- vantage. The queen, in reply to the petition, informed tho.se who had signed it that the bishops had been directed to examine the matter, and that if they failed to do their duty in a reasonable ])eriod she would speedily supply the want and rectify the evil ijy her own spiritual supremacy. But nothing had been done. On one occasion, in 1577, — to pass from the ailments of the ministers to those of the Supreme Governess, — the queen suffered so acutely from toothache that she believed herself to have been bewitched. This conviction grew in force from the fact that some representations or images of Her Majesty, Cecil, and Walsingham had been recently found (or were said to have been found) concealed in the house of an ancient priest who sojourned at Islington ; while Dr. Dee's personal tuition had made her singularly superstitious. This poor innocent priest was believed to have been practising " malign magic " ; for the ordinary royal physicians, instead of relieving their patient, entered into a violent controversy as to what potions ought to l)e given, and ])ractically did nothing. Perhaps these physicians were also bewitched. Her Majesty's pains and aches by con- sequence continued, and even grew in violence, so that the Lords of the Council thought it their duty to interfere and take the matter in hand. A foreign doctor, Fenatus by name, had been highly recommended to them by some of the Protestant exiles ; but the queen mistrusted all foreigners, and Walsingham feared the man might turn out to be "possibly a Jew or even a Papist." So they bade him write a prescription without even .seeing the royal patient. This, of course, was a difficult undertaking. ^ Independent synods had been set up to which only the "elect" were summoned ; in various counties, clas'^es and gatherings for tlie exposition of Scripture and prayer had been formed; "ordination," so-called, by ]:>rcsby- ters had l)een given to persons who were supposed to own special gifts of speecli ; and unauthorised fast-days «ere appointed, wholly independent of the (lueen's bishops. —See Strype's Life of Whitgift, vol. lii. pp. 244 256, and the "Articles" exhibited against Thomas Canwrighi. THE queen's progresses AND VISITATIONS. 20/ Howsoever, after having penned a long Latin letter, very devout, but rather wordy, explaining his own entire unworthiness to treat so mighty a queen for the toothache, he " drew a bow at a venture," and reasonably enough recommended a fomentation of narcotic herbs, which, however, did no good at all. The alter- native which he had wisely suggested, and which certainly went to the root of the matter, was to have the tooth drawn. But to this the queen would not submit. She could not abide the pain. Though in her name the rack and the little-ease were in constant use on " seminaries," yet she herself quaked and sickened at the very sight of a steel forceps. Her heart, as it seemed, came up into her mouth. However, in order to brace up her nerves, Aylmer, Bishop of London, at the Council-board, told her that "although he was an old man and had not many teeth to spare, she could see a practical experiment upon himself, if she thought well," and forthwith he bade the surgeon take out one of his own teeth in the queen's presence. This having been done "without much blooding and no cries," the queen, in turn, timorously submitted to a like operation, and so was relieved. The " witch- craft " was thus defeated. Year by year throughout her reign, the queen, as a matter of pleasure and recreation, visited different parts of the country, and was received with great state and often with extravagant pomp by the nobility and gentry. Many of them seriously crippled themselves by the outlay necessary for such entertainments, and greatly impoverished their estates in so receiving her. She came with her Court and servants, whom her chief allies and gracious people of rank were likewise expected to entertain ; and she always looked for special amusements, — masques, bear-baiting, tiresome speeches full of flattery, morris-dancing, hunting, and hawking. Sometimes no less than two hundred servants accompanied her. Lord Leicester entertained her at Kenilworth ; Sir Henry Lee at Quarrendon, near Aylesbury ; and from time to time the chief nobility and gentlepeople of every county. When she left their houses, she expected to receive presents of money, jewellery, and other valuable and acceptable gifts. The queen on one occasion took Berkeley Castle in her progress. During her stay no less than twenty-seven stags of a rare race of red deer were killed, while many others were "stolen and havocked," which so annoyed Lord Berkeley that he actually there and then disparked the place. The queen, on hearing of this, counselled his lordship to be more prudent in what he said and did in the future ; informing him that Lord Leicester liked the situation of his family castle very much, and hinted that, 20S THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. if he was not more careful, he might lose it. The morality of such a contemplated robbery was quite in accordance with this autocratic woman's morality in general. At Euston, in Norfolk, the queen was most hospitably enter- tained by a young esquire named Edward Rookwood (who had lately been married), at his pleasant mansion near Thetford, in August of the year 1578. His residence was of no great size, and, in selecting it as a resting-place, the queen passed over several large mansions near. This may have been for a purpose. When Her Majesty was about to leave, she, of course, thanked Rookwood for his reception of her — she could have done nothing less — and gave him her hand to kiss. But the Earl of Sussex, Her Majesty's Chamberlain, having learnt that he had been excommunicated for "papistrie," called him forward and rated him with bitterness and violence.^ His lordship asked Rookwood how he who, because of his religion, was wholly unfit to accom- pany any Christian person, and was fitter to be put into a pair of stocks, had dared to come into the queen's " reall presence." Rookwood was then ordered out of the room, and at Norwich was committed to prison. An oaken image of the Blessed Virgin, which had been taken down from the lady-altar of a neighbouring church, and had been carefully secreted in a hay-loft, was acci- dentally discovered by some of the Court servants. The queen expressed her horror at the " sight of such a wicked idol " ■ which 1 Richard Topcliffe, the rack master and official torturer, has left a record of these events, the spelling of which I have ventured to put into modern shape: — "This Rooliwood is a Papist of kind newly crept out of his late wardship. Her Majesty, by some means I know not, was lodged at his house, Euston, far unmeet for Her Highness, but fitter for the blackguard ; nevertheless (the gentleman brought into Her Majesty's presence by like device), Her Excellent Majesty gave to Rookwood ordinary thanks for his bad house, and her fair hand to kiss ; after which it was braved at. But my Lord Chamljcrlain nobly and gravely understanding that Rookwood was excommunicatetl for papistry called him before him ; demanded of him how he durst to attempt her real ])resence, he inifit to accompany any Christian person ; forthwith said he was fitter for a pair of stocks, commanded him out of the Court, and yet to attend her Council's pleasure ; and at Norwich he was committed. And to decypher the gentleman to the full (a piece of plate being missed in the Court, and searched for in his hay-house), in the hay-rick such an image of Our Lady was there found as for greatness, for gayness, and workmanship I did never see a match ; and after a sort of country dance ended in Her Majesty's sight, the idol was set behind the people who avoided. She rather seemed a beast raised upon a sudden from hell by conjuring, than the picture for whom it had been so often and long abused. Her RIajesty commanded it to the fire, which in her sight by the country folks was quickly done, to her content, and mispeakal)le joy of every one, but some one or two who had sucked of the idol's poisoned milk." — Lodge, vol. ii. p. 1S6. THE OLD PARISH CHURCHES. 209 was burnt on the village green in her presence and with her marked approbation. As she journeyed from place to place, every endeavour was made to keep the poor, the poverty-stricken, and the diseased out of her sight. If they came too near her moving retinue, they were summarily punished with great and sharp severity. It was often her custom, however, to speak condescendingly and freely with her people, from whom by close questioning and most pertinent inquiries — having beckoned them to her presence — she frequently found out the true state of the locality. The old religious houses were in ruins, their lands ill cultivated. Beggars abounded, and so infested some parts of the country — Bernewode Forest in Buckinghamshire, and that of Charnwode in Leicestershire, for example — that travelling was dangerous. Moreover, the churches ^ everywhere, not only all but empty or ill-attended and utterly uncared for, were going steadily to ruin. Anciently, as no one can deny, the parish church was looked upon with affection as the common home of all. By right of the new birth at the font, every one was equal in the sight of God when kneeling at mass, or worshipping at evensong, whether knight or knave, earl or husbandman. Low and squat were the oak-bound cottages of wattle'^ and thatch which clustered to- gether picturesquely in remote spots round spire or tower ; and, sheltered by ancient trees, were the humble but well-loved homes of a people blessed in the natural order, and marvellously sancti- fied by gifts of grace. But there was one building in every such village, of which, howsoever simple in itself, the form and outline were the seemliest for its sacred purpose that mind could plan or local hand design. Of it, the stones had been reverently hewn and chiselled, the window tracery artfully drawn out and carved, the roof of oak, the font and altar made of the best that could be gotten, and duly blessed in God's Holy Name. The church was the chief building both of town and village. In such humble temples the glowing prophecies of an elder dispensation had their literal fulfilment ; for while the pine-tree and the box-tree ^ "The parish churches themselves — those amazing monuments of early- piety, built by men who themselves lived in clay hovels, while they lavished their taste, their labour, and their wealth on 'the House of God' — were still dissolving in ruin." — History of England, by J. A. Froude, Reign of Elizabeth, vol. ii. p. 93. - "Wattle," a composition of mortar, mud, and straw, of which cottage walls in Elizabeth's time were commonly built. In numbers of villages at the present day a similar material is largely used, and in some parts still bears the same name. In other parts, it is termed "watchyt." O 210 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. beautified the place of God's sanctuary, there, too, the realities of the gospel perfectly fulfilled the ancient types of the law. The daily sacrifice was ever offered, both for quick and dead. The Lamb of God took away the sins of the world. Day by day and week by week the people thus so abundantly blessed came to worship. They were all of one faith and one mind. Year by year children were born and new born, young men and maidens were united in marriage, the sick were anointed, the suffering cared for ; and in due course the graveyard, across which the shadow of tower or spire crept slowly, received the bodies of those who had done their work and run their race, and, sleeping in Christ, were there laid up for the resurrection morning. When these poor and humble folks died, they seldom forgot the church or its needs, but by testamentary disposition directly evidenced their faith and charity.^ Even the husbandman often bequeathed something towards maintaining the lamp before the rood, over and above the sum apportioned for his own mortuary mass and month's-mind. Kneeling, from time to time, before the outstretched arms of his dying Redeemer, he had learnt, more exactly than sermon could ever inform him, of the deep meaning of those simple words of the belief — -"Jesus Christ was crucified " — and of his merciful Lord's undying love. Those in the ranks of yeomen or merchants often gave, in addition, six shillings and eightpence, or thirteen shillings and fourpence, for the church, a suit of vestments or silver /rt-.v for some special altar, twelve or twenty pounds of wax for the choir lights or Paschal taper, and always a settled sum for funeral doles to their poorer neighbours. No one went to an open grave without saying a prayer for the dead person's soul. The rich from moated mansion or crenelated castle gave in proportion to their abundance ; so that the treasures of the Lord's House, even in the poorest villages steadily increasing, were both worthy of the respective givers and of the object. But at the time at which Queen Elizabeth made her progresses throughout the land all this had been changed, and so changed that men marvelled how such a radical and startling change could have been accomplished in little more than a single generation. Sometimes unjust persecution works its own cure. Here, ' Having been recently permitted to examine at leisure the original MS. wills of certain parts of Oxfortlshire and Buckinghamshire, the author, who read portions of several hundreds, from the year 1530 downwards, is confident of the accuracy of his statements in the text. REMEDIES FOR THE RESTRAINED. 211 however, it had been so systematic, relentless,^ and determined that most of those who had stood forward to resist innovation — homeless, ruined, and outlawed — were swept away by the unchecked tide of change, which, so to speak, had flooded and overwhelmed the land. In the year 1585, no less than seventy-two priests were banished ; while from a calculation made from various returns to the Privy Council of certain dioceses, there could not have been less than four hundred and fifty about that period still in prison.- What to do v/ith them greatly puzzled the authorities. Some one, evidently a person of wisdom and foresight, had prepared a written suggestion which was no doubt read, and which, still preserved amongst the State papers, is headed "The Means to Stay the Declining in Religion." It stands thus :— '■'■ Remedies for the Restrained. — The execution of them, as experience hath showed, in respect of their constancy (or rather obstinacy) moveth many to compassion, and draweth some to ^ " Many Catholics have fled the realm ; others live in obscure, unknown places by contrary names. Some commend themselves prisoners to noblemen, whereof one so prisoner, his patience, demeanour, and purity of life were such that the lady of the said house said to some secret friends of hers, ' If all Papists lived so well as my lord's prisoner did, Protestants must needs be in an ill state towards God.' " — An Ancient £dit<07- s Note-Bock, JVIS., Stony- hurst College. ^ See, amongst other documents. State I'apers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. clxxviii. n. 72 ; vol. cxc. n. 44 ; vol. cxciii. n. 67 ; vol. cxcix. n. 15 ; and vol. ccii. n. 61, etc. etc. What these prisons were has been most forcibly stated by Canon Raine of York : — " It is impossible to speak in terms of too strong reprobation of the state of the northern prisons in the seventeenth century, and of the conduct of their keepers. They were dens of iniquity and horror, in which men and women herded together indiscriminately. . . . Some of them had no light and no ventilation ; several were partly under water when- ever there was a flood. The number of prisoners who died in gaol during this century is positively startling. And how could they live in such places where they were treated worse than savages themselves? The ordinary conveniences and necessaries of life were denied to them. They were at the mercy of the gaolers for their food and for everything they possessed. They had the meanest fare at the most exorbitant price. If they resisted, there were irons and screws that compelled them to be silent. There were also the greatest inequality and injustice in the treatment of the prisoners. Those that had money had many indulgences. They were allowed to go to places of amusement without the walls of the gaol, and some were even permitted to lodge beyond the precincts, suljected only to some trifling surveillance. Peter Prison in York and the hold in Ousebridge were a disgrace to any civilised country. The cells in the latter place would almost have rivalled the notorious Black Hole. Air, light, and ventilation were absent, and the waters of the river rushed in when they were above their usual level." — Depositions froui the Castle of York relatinf; to Offences committed in the Aorthern Counties, etc., Surtees' Society Publications, A.D. 1861. 212 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. affect their religion, upon conceit that such an extraordinary contempt of death cannot but proceed from above ; whereby- many have fallen away. " And, therefore, it is a convenient thing to be considered whether it were not convenient that some other remedy were put in execution. And in case the execution of them shall not be thought the best course, then it is to be considered what other way were fit to be held with them. " There are of these seminaries two sorts, some learned and politic withal, and of great persuasion ; others simple, having neither zeal, wit, nor learning. " For the first, they are to be sent to Wisbech, or some such- like place, where they may be under honest keeping, and be restrained from access and intelligence; for that being banished, they might do a great deal of harm. " For the second, they may be banished, as others before, upon penalty to be executed if they return. "Such as were banished and are returned are to be presently executed." 1 This document, by whomsoever written, was thought to be of so much importance, and of such practical value that, as Sir Francis Walsingham wrote to his ally and friend Phillipps, its suggestions were exactly adopted by the Council. Here is the letter - : — " My lords do mean to take order with the seminary priests by banishment of some, executing of others, and by committing the rest to Wisbech, or some such-like place, under some honest keeper. I have thought good to send you a register of their names ; to the end you may confer with the party you wot of, and to desire him to set down their intentions to do harm in their several kinds. " I take it there will be found very few of them fit to do good. And so I commit you to God. At Barnes, the 25th December 1586. — Your loving Friend, Fra. Walsingham." In what way "order was taken" may be learnt with exactness ^ Slate Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. cxcv. n. 114. The number of poor recusants was so great that at one sessions in Hampshire no less than four hundred were presented as ofi'enders against the law ; while in the north- west county of Lancaster six hundred were presented (see Stryiie's Annals, vol. iii. p. 478, Appendix 98). Thomas Cowper, Bishop of Winchester (a.d. 1584), suggested to the Council that one or two hundred " lustie men well able to labour" might be sent to Flanders as pioneers and workmen for the army {Ibid. 169^. - Cotton MSS., Brit. ^Llseu^■l, Caligula, C. ix. f. 566. TORTURES OF THE ANCIENT CLERGY. 21 3 from the following letter,^ preserved amongst the State papers, evidently from the pen of one who was extremely well informed : — " They lately threatened Mr. Sherwin, a priest, with renewed tortures, and then to execute him and his companions ; but he, preferring a present death to longer life, was not at all dismayed by their threats. " We shall, I hope, very shortly learn what will become of us. We all indeed greatly desire to pay the debt of Nature at once, rather than to languish on by a daily death. However, there is no one here who does not earnestly pray our Lord Jesus Christ to grant His aid, whereby to render us worthy to suffer for His glory all torments and tortures, nay, even death itself, otherwise so bitter to Nature, rather than to offend the Divine Majesty in the least degree contrary to each one's conscience. " It is, I think, patent and a known fact to many, that some of our afflicted ones have endured the most terrible tortures, than which, on account of their excessive torments, death itself is far preferable, constantly and willingly ere they would consent to the most abominable crime {i.e. apostacy). Of which things there are certain living witnesses, especially Luke Kirby and Thomas Cottam, two venerable priests, who were subjected to a certain iron instrument of torture called in English the 'Scavenger's Daughter,' enduring this most bitter torture for an entire hour or more. Others — namely, the Reverend Mr. Skinner and Mr. Briant, twice; Mr. Johnson, indeed, but once — were cruelly tortured on the rack, attended with the most exquisite sufferings. Mr. Alart lay stretched upon it for three hours in torture; but beyond this, or at least more severely for that time, he was not tortured. And after the same manner they dealt with a portion of the rest of his companions, not without some great attempts to bring them to a compliance being made. " Some were thrust down into a certain underground dungeon, very deep, and being shut in on every side, involved in the densest darkness. Amongst these were Johnson, Bristow, and Brian, all of them priests, some of whom spent two entire months in this chamber of horrors. As for the others, all of them, together with your Superior, were thrust into certain obscure and dark corners, deprived of hope and assistance, without beds or other necessaries of any kind. Thus they dealt with Stanislaus Bristow and the others. The greater portion of them from this time are confined separately in squalid and dismal cells, where 1 This is believed to be from the pen of the Rev. Edward Rishton. The original is in Latin.— 5m/^ Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, 15S1, vol. cxli.v. n. 61. 214 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. they are not allowed at any time to see any one, much less to speak with a friend. " Mr. Brian, of whom I spoke before, was for some days worn out, and well-nigh killed with hunger. At length, for the greater increase of his pain, he was most atrociously tortured by needles being violently thrust under his nails. (Ah, miser !) " By these things which are written, most dear brothers in Christ, it is well known what, and what kind of tortures the sons of God, and the true servants of Christ, patiently endure for their firm defence of the orthodox faith ; and should it be required of ihem, are ready willingly to undergo still greater. "This only thing we implore of His mercy, that He will of His goodness grant uspatienceandperseveranceeventotheend. Which that we may the more speedily obtain, we earnestly implore your prayers for us, and the more so as we are not without some appre- hension, seeing that the Prefect of the Tower yesterday, and again to-day, was summoned to the Court, in order that, as we believe, he might be informed with certainty what is decided upon about us." The cases here referred to by Mr. Rishton were only ordinary examples of what was being continually carried out by the authorities. Amongst the State papers, document after docu- ment has come to light showing the artful malignity, the cruelty, as well as the perseverance of the persecuting and triumphant faction. Although in ordinary histories of this period little or no reference is made to such acts ; yet no adequate conception of the true state of affairs can be had without some study of the various records of these odious barbarities. Throughout this queen's reign there were not wanting occasional tokens, mysterious, supernatural, and, as some would say, in a measure miraculous,^ of the grave displeasure of the Almighty ^ On the other hand, to some of those who suffered, singular tokens of the Almighty's favour were graciously given. For example, the Rev. Stephen Rousham, who was executed at Gloucester in 15S7, was thus singularly favoured. He had been banished, but had returned, and of him yln Ancient Editor s Note- Book gives the following particulars : — "A man of singular per- fection, he had in his lifetime many heavenly visions, as great lights in windows and places where he was alone, and sometimes with others. His crown of martyrtlom [wa^-] showetl him most gloriously, being yet a minister, and in schism. Afterwards a priest and in prison, God the Ealher, Christ riest, and the priest so made needed no ordina- tion whatever. These ojiinions Cranmer followed out to their legitimate consequences. He held that his own spiritual functions, like the secular functions of the Chancellor and the Treasurer, were at once determined by a demise of the Crown. \\'hen Henry died, therefore, the archbishop and his suffragans took out fre-h commissions empowering them to ordain and to perform other spiritual functions, till the new Sovereign should tliink fit to order otherwise. When it was objected that a power to bind and to loose, altogether distinct from temporal power, had been given by our Lord to His Apostles, the theologians of this [ihe Krastian] school replied that the power to l)ind and to loose had descended not to the clergy, but to the whole body of Christian men, and ought to be exerci-ed by the chief magistrate as the representative of the society." — Ibid. p. 56. ^ In 1582 Archbishop Grindal's Vicar-General gave a formal written licence to John Morrison, a Scotch Presbyterian preacher, both to i)reach and to minister the .Sacraments throughout the province of Canterbury. This docu- ment distinctly exhibits the true position of the question of Orders, for it states that Morrison had received imposition of the hands of the General Synod, i.e. the presbyters and elders of the county of Lothian ; and that the faith of the new coinmunion of John Knox was conformable with that newly set up and established by the authority of Parliament in England. — On the other hand, it seems that a certain .Serjeant Manwood, subsequently a judge, wrote to Archbishop I'aiker, asking that the vacant living of Old Romney, might be given to Nicholas Jones, his brother's sonin-law, who, however, had already been refused it once, for two good reasons : first, that he was not a member of any university ; and, secondly, because he had never been ordained." Here it may be noted that some of the new prelates were more lax than others. — Parker MSS., C. C. Coll., Camb. No. cxiv. folio 935. TRAVERS AND HOOKER. 22/ The case of Travers, the earnest and outspoken lecturer of the Temple Church in London, is equally to the point. He had been originally educated at Cambridge, was a good Oriental scholar ; and, having gone to Geneva several years previously, there made the acquaintance of Theodore Beza. Thus he became settled in his misbelief as a Calvinist ; and going to Flanders, was made a minister at Antwerp, ^ where, with Cart- wright, another notable Calvinistic Puritan, he preached to the workmen at the English factory. In 1584 he returned to England, and on the strength of his foreign ordination, was at once made chaplain to Lord Burghley ; who subsequently secured for him the appointment of lecturer at the Temple. His abilities as a preacher were considerable, his oratory powerful ; his learning, though one-sided and narrow, was solid ; his method systematic, and his rhetoric remarkably telling and effective. ^ He consequently gained a great influence over the councillors of the Temple, and secured an enthusiastic following. When the celebrated minister, Richard Hooker, who inclined to ancient principles, was made master of that corporation on March 17, 1584, he himself commonly preached in the morning, and Travers in the afternoon. What the former "grave and painful divine" (as his contemporaries termed him) asserted in his thoughtful sermon after mattins, that the lecturer was accustomed flatly to contradict in his eloquent discourse which followed evensong in the afternoon. This state of things, thougli then common enough in many country places, was not unlikely to breed grave dissensions and inconvenience in the city of London. The lecturer at the Temple, however, was then neither peculiar nor alone in his policy. Hundreds of ministers had no other orders, and an mnumerable number plainly contradicted the neighbouring preachers to their right hand and to their left. But in London these offences became very notorious. So Travers was brought before the Court of High Commission, and after no great con- sideration an order was signed to silence him. Policy, not law, influenced the decision. He appealed for redress to the Lords of the Council, asserting somewhat loosely and vaguely that " by virtue of the communion of saints all ordinations, whether by ^ For the testimonial of his ordination at Antwerp by the Presbytery, datei 14 May 157S, see Fuller's Church History, book ix. p. 214. ^ Fuller writes flatteringly of Travers, that his " utterance was graceful, gesture plausible, matter justifiable, method plain, and his style carried with it indolevi pietatis, a genius of grace flowing from his sanctified heart." — Church Histcry. 228 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. presbyter or bishop, were of equal value in the Church of Christ." But this did not serve him. Archbishop Whitgift disallowed the proposition.^ Such loose jDrinciples, it was seen, might seriously inconvenience the bishops, now that the Puritans were so rapidly gaining in strength, numbers, and influence ; so that, under Archbishop Whitgift's advice, Travers was condemned both for want of Orders and for lack of jurisdiction, in very plain terms.- Afterwards he went to Ireland, at the invitation ot Adam Loftus, Archbishop of Dublin, where orders were held to be of very slender importance, and became provost of Trinity College ; but Calvinism was not over-popular there — as Bale had long ago discovered — and he made several enemies, so resigning this appointment, he eventually returned to England, where he ended his days. In 1586, the state of morals in London had become so frightful, while among the preachers or ministers the peace- makers were few and the sowers of discord and brawlers so many, that John Aylmer, the bishop, who at once states and deplores the evils, ordered the Commination Service to be said at least three times a year, to avert the looked-for wrath of God. In so doing, we may reasonably wonder if he ever called to mind the atrocious acts of sacrilege which he himself, when Archdeacon of Lincoln, had perpetrated or directly sanctioned twenty years before. In the utter moral corruption then existing, the nation was only reaping what had been so recently sown by these " Reforming " prelates and their party. Several of the clergy, to judge by the actual words of this Bishop's Visitation Articles,^ were believed to keep suspected women in their houses, to be grossly incontinent, given to ^Archbishop Whitgift, in 15S9, was the first prelate of the "reformed" Church who claimed for episcopacy the joint character of "apostolic" and "divine." Hatton, Bancroft, Bilson, and Andrewes followed him sub- sequently in maintaining the truth and importance of the same principle. But, like Hooker, they weie uncertain, ambiguous, and feeble in setting it forth ; while, in almost every case, they hesitated to condemn the Puritans, excejit on the policy of expediency. - The actual terms of the order condemning Travers were as follows : — "That he was no lawfully-ordained minister according to the Church of England ; that he preached without being licensed ; that he had openly pre- sumed to confute such doctrine as had been jmblicly delivered by another preacher, without giving warning of these controversial sallies to the lawful ordinary ; and that this lii)erty was contrary to a provision made in the seventh year of this reign, for avoiding disturbances in the Church." The authority of rarliament, not that of the old canon law, was thus brought to bear upon him. •* Imprinted at London by Richard Johnes, dwelling at the Rose and the Crowne, neerc unto Holborne Bridge, 15S6. THE STATE OF THE COUNTRY. 229 drunkenness, indecency/ idleness, hunting, hawking, and dicing, to be table-swearers, dancers, liars, and false dissemblers ; while many in all parts, as well in the Province of York as in that of Canterbury, notoriously ministered, or pretended to minister,^ without having received any ordination of any sort or kind. Illiterate, ignorant, and uninstructed, the more violent and vulgar they were in frantically denouncing the religion of their grandparents — w'omen as well as shopkeepers joined in the work^ — the better they found themselves suited to the depraved taste or religious excitement and Calvinistic blasphemy of the multi- tude, and the greater was the favour shown them by those ministers of the queen who superintended the ancient dioceses, and were officially pledged to root out the old faith. Infants at this time were no longer baptized, as many old parish registers abundantly show ; while the Lord's Supper was now celebrated at night, and Evening Communion introduced by these " Reforma- tion " worthies.'* The most rampant revolutionary utterances, often ridiculous in themselves when not painfully blasphemous, ^ In January 1581, Davye Wood, a drunken preacher, scandalously ill- treated his wife, and when two women interfered, exposed himself to them. — Vide State Papers, Elir.abeth, vol. cxlvii. n. 4. - Archbishop Parker, had some years previously, i.e. in 1575, inquired " whether any have intruded themselves and presumed to exercise any kind of ministry loithont imposition of hands and /awful caliing !>}' ordinary authority, and whether any admitted h\i\. io ded^conuQ nsnrpe the ojiee of the minister. Item, whether any lay persons take upon them to read openly in the congregation Divine Service in any church, chappie, or oratorie, without there be thereunto upon some urgent cause or great necessity for a time licensed by the ordinary. Whether such have been allowed, and how long ihey have served, and whether any of them have taken upon them to solemnise matrimony, or to minister any Sacrament." — Parkers Articles of Enquiry, 1575. London, John Daye. It is evident, therefore, from the early years of Queen Elizabeth's reign, that the greatest laxity had prevailed ; and that, in fact, ordination by a bishop was not thought at all necessary to enable a person to hold an ecclesiastical benefice. ^ The common people of England were wiser than the wisest of the nation ; for here the very women and shopkeepers were able to judge of predestina- tion and determine what laws were to be made concerning Church govern- ment ; and then what were fit to be made or abolisht : that they were more able (or, at least, thought so) to raise and determine perplext cases of conscience than the wisest of the most learned colleges in Italy : that men of the slightest learning, and the most ignorant of the common people, were mad for a new, or super, or re- reformation of religion." — Quoted in Isaac Walton's Life of Kichard Hooker, ■* " Baptizing of infants, although confessed by themselves to have been continued ever sithence the very Apostles' own times, yet they altogether condemned. . . . The Eucharist they received (pretending our Lord and Saviour's example) after supper." — Hooker's Preface, p. 1S6, vol. i., Hooker's Works, Ed. Keble. Oxford, 1845. 230 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. were sometimes mistaken by the open-mouthed and deeply impressed Hsteners for special revelations from the Divine Spirit of Truth. Frantic prophets, with staff and scroll and lying lips, jabbered of things sacred without any regard for sense and decency, or thundered forth curses and anathemas for the Chief Bishop of Christendom ; while the true glad tidings of salvation, which had cheered the hearts of thousands in life, and comforted the way-worn and weary in death for well-nigh ten centuries, were rejected with contumely and scorn. CHAPTER VIII. In the summer of 1583, as already briefly recorded, Edmund Grindal, who, by the queen's favour, had been Primate of all England for nine years, had gone to his last account in the palace of Croydon. A Cumberland man, educated at Cam- bridge and patronised by Ridley, he was always puritanically inclined, differing in but few particulars from the ordinary herd of commonplace Elizabethan prelates. The so-called " prophesy- ings" already referred to, found in him a sincere and bold admirer. These "religious exercises" had largely aided in making confusion worse confounded all over the country ; having directly tended to degrade religion, to extend frivolous and profitless controversies, to foster self-delusions, and even to en- danger social order, by bringing all authority into contempt and disrepute. The excitement they sometimes produced was in itself inherently mischievous, as the queen and some of her advisers had good cause for believing. But Grindal, having in a bold and outspoken letter declined to put down the pestilent discussions in question, though expressly ordered to do so by the Supreme Governess herself, was promptly and duly suspended from his archiepiscopal office without further ado. The royal lady who had conferred that dignity upon him, thus temporarily took it away again, without direct charge or any trial, to his great annoyance and chagrin. He was furthermore peremptorily commanded to remain a prisoner in his own palace in Surrey — an order at once dutifully obeyed ; and, had it not been for his death, there is good reason to believe that he would have been shortly evicted absolutely. The poor perplexed man, who had then grown blind, physically as well as morally, fretted sorely over the disorders of the time and because of his punishment ; some affirming that, exhausted with worry and worn-out with disappointment, he died of a broken heart. Certainly the exist- ing state of public affairs, when contrasted with the harmony and unity of the days when he was a Cumberland youth, happy amid the hills and lakes of a beautiful country, could not fail to have' 232 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. Struck him keenly. No one remembered him after death. He who in the spirit of a pagan had distinctly forbidden prayers for departed Christian souls/ was himself soon and altogether for- gotten when dead and buried. The following, relating to this period, from an old and authentic record of persecution, tells its own tale : — " Mrs. Anne Landers, in one of the cruel searches which the Lord President did continually cause to be made in and about York, was apprehended for her religion, together with many other gentlewomen, and committed prisoner to Ousebridge. Her husband, an attorney, was apprehended for going about to defend his wife by law, and sent prisoner to London, and con- demned to the pillory ; from whence, fearing the infamy of that punishment, he wrote to his wife to yield somewhat to the times in matter of religion, which was a cause to her of unspeakable grief and abundant tears for many days. At length she wrote back to her husband her resolute mind to suffer all manner of crosses rather than to offend Him Who had died upon the Cross for her, and desiring him to do the like ; and so he did, suffering patiently the punishment of the pillory for the cause above mentioned. After this she had liberty for awhile; but, being taken the second time, she was committed to York Castle about the year 1579, where she did much good by example of her godly life and charitable works. From thence she was removed to the castle of Hull. The terror and fearful report of the hard and cruel usage there of Catholics did not dismay her, being suddenly separated from her husband and children, and committed to a cruel and unmerciful keeper. There she lived five or six years, suffering with great constancy, patience, and Christian fortitude, and comforting all other afflicted Catholics, her fellow-prisoners, and relieving them with great alms. At length she was called for by warrant to London to the same prison where her husband was, where she lived as godly as she had done before ; and lastly they both departed this life in the Counter [or the Clink].' - During all these years nothing could have exceeded the dis- order and confusion which existed. Everything was out of gear. ■^ Grindal, in 1571, had specially enjoined in his IhJiiucHoiis "that neither on All Saints' Day, alter evening ]irayer, nor the next day after (of late called All Souls' Day), there be any ringing at all other than to common prayer, when the same shall hapi)en to fall upon the Sunday. And that no months' minds or yearly commemorations of the dead, nor any other superstitious ceremonies be observed or used, which tend to the maintenance either ot prayer for the dead or of the popish purgatory." — London : W. Serres, 1571- - T/i€ Troubles of Our Catholic Fortfathers, 3rd Series, p. 323. London, 1S77. STATE OF THE CHURCH FABRICS. 233 Restlessness was universal. Men both unordained and un- licensed still continued to officiate.^ The old order of things had been duly and deliberately destroyed by brute force ; though whether this could have been done unless much wicked- ness and corruption, much self-seeking, worldliness, and in- difference had existed,- seems more than doubtful. The state of the fabrics of the churches, and the nature of the services in them had rapidly gone from bad to worse. Many more of the former were then becoming ruinous. In some dioceses, notoriously those of Oxford and Norwich, numerous churches and chapels were deliberately allowed to become utterly desolate. Men could not be secured to serve them, for the new owners of the great tithes were often only eminent for their super- fine rapacit)'. In certain of the churches, no service of any sort or kind had been held for nearly twelve years. There was often no one either to look after the fabric, to keep up the straggling hedges or impaired fences of the churchyards (in which swine ^ often gr-ubbed up the graves) ; no one to let fresh air into the building, or to preserve the remaining fittings from the alternate evils of mustiness and damp on the one hand, or of dry-rot and pilferers on the other. Doors at last lost their rusted hinges and imperfect fastenings ; dust accumulated ; storied windows were broken ; starlings found a shelter under the roofs; spiders undis- turbed spun their webs in convenient angles ; bell-towers were turned into dove-cotes and places for breeding pigeons, by some local yeoman. The bells, no longer needed, were sold — for they brought in something ; the lead was stripped of the aisle roofs ; sometimes the chancel was altogether destroyed, so as to avoid ^ "Whether any doe presume to saie service in your church or chappell openly luho is not a lawfull 7)iinister and sufficiently licensed by the ordinarie or this archdeaconrie under the seal of his office?" — Visi/afioii Articles of John King, Archdeacon of Nottingham. Oxford, Joseph Barnes. '•^ As the Rev. T. E. Bridgett so frankly admits: — "I cannot forget that Our Lady's Dowry in England was not destroyed by an incursion of un- baptized heathen nor by Protestants brought up from infancy in anti-Catholic prejudice, and taught to connect the honour of the Son in some strange fashion with the dishonour or neglect of the Mother. No, alas ! the enemies of Our Lady had been children of the Catholic Church." — Our Lady's Dowry. London, 1875. " There is a peculiar inscription on the outer wall of Chiswick churchyard, thus: — " This wall was made at ye charges of ye right honorable and truelle pious Lord Francis Russell, Earle of Bedford, out of true zeale and care for ye keeping of this churchyard and ye wardrobe of Godd's saints, whose bodies lay herein buryed, from violating by swine and other prophanation. Wit- nesseth, W. Walker, 1623." This was Francis, fourth Earl of Bedford, who married Katherine, daughter of Giles Brydges, third Lord Chandos, and was the father of the first Duke of Bedford, 234 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. the cost and difficulty of repairing it ; wliile in certain cases these combined evils eventually led to the absolute destruction of whole fabrics. So that even now in many parishes it is impos- sible for any but the duly-initiated to trace even the foundation stones on some secluded slope of what until Queen Elizabeth's day had been a fair and stately house of God. Many such at the hands of the "godly" were wholly "reformed" off the face of the earth.^ It is now necessary to deal at some length with one of the darkest events of Elizabeth's reign, — bearing as it does so directly on the ecclesiastical policy of her advisers. How the judicial murder of a royal guest and kinswoman was compassed by the English queen shall now be told. The well-meant advice which Catharine de' Medici had given to Queen Mary to return to Scotland turned out to be most unfortunate. Her long minority enabled rival factions to have brought the country into a state bordering upon civil war, while deeds of infamy and ferocity were done there, with scarcely a parallel in history. John Knox, the notorious apostate monk, was then carrying out what some imaginative persons still term a " Reformation " — the chief consequent effects of which have been schism, heresy, disorder, misbelief, and eventually infidelity.- Subsequently after many trials, personal as well as political, Queen Mary became a prisoner in the hands of her own subjects. When she succeeded in escaping from their prison walls, and at Elizabeth's invitation came to England, she found herself only too secure in the keeping of her wily and deadly enemy. ^ ^ In the diocese of Oxford (though portions were then in that of Lincoln) may he mentioned the churches of North Weston, Kasington, Quarrendon, Crcsjow, Mursley, Littlecote near Stewkiey, Medmenham, Saunderton, Deyncourt near Woburn, and Rowsliam in \\'ingrave, as ruined or razed. The late Rev. W. Hastings Kelke, in a paper on the Desecrated Churches in Bucks {/records of Bucks, vol. iii. p. 127), asserts that the whole number in Buckinghamshire alone may be estimated at no less than sixty. The Oxford diocese now also comprises Berkshire as well as Oxfordshire. Supposing that each of such churclies woukl have accommodated a hundred worshippers (a k)w calculation), this destruction thus robbed the people of six thousand sittings. - In almost all town parishes in Scotland there are in the present day at lea'-t three buildings used for preaching and prayer according to the rules and rights of the Established religion, the Free Church religion, and that of the United Presbyterians ; but these all differ. Independent of these leading sects, there are many others of inferior importance and influence, more or less Christian in certain of their tenets. •' " /Av- iiitprisoniiieut can only be jttslified as an act of State necessity. There is no other plea. To have opened her prison doors and bade her go forth free would have made her the active chief and rallying-point of Catholic NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE. 235 It was the peculiar and almost unique position of Queen Elizabeth which from the outset of her reign gave her advisers such an obvious advantage, in pressing their reforms and revolu- tions upon the English people. Edward VI. was dead ; Mary Tudor was dead ; and, as Elizabeth was notoriously illegitimate both in fact and law, Mary Queen of Scots was, without any doubt, the direct and immediate heiress to the throne of England, and was also wife of Francis, heir to the king of France. The English people, who knew all this well and accurately enough, saw at once that their island-honie seemed thus more than likely to become a mere province of France — a humiliation loo great to be borne. Thus many practical questions, as they arose in turn during Elizabeth's reign, were considered by politicians with this grave alternative directly staring them in the face. No other method of treating these questions than that adopted could have so successfully won the confidence of the great cities and centres of renewed life. On the subject of national independence, more- over, the husbandman and hind were as much united in senti- ment with the merchant and the townsman as Lord Burghley could have desired. The formal frivolities which were tolerated regarding the queen's matrimonial arrangements ; the numerous reasonable and unreasonable proposals for her royal hand ; the anxious debates round the council-board concerning the different candidates — juvenile, antique, or adventurous — who came forward for the honour of becoming her husband, all arose from an exact knowledge of the situation's gravity. Therefore it came to pass, not unreasonabl}^, that so many leading men alike stood forward as active opponents of Mary Stuart and warm supporters of Queen Elizabeth. It was not at the outset (when men began to take sides) a choice of two religions, the old and the new, the Catholic and the Protestant, for nine-tenths of the people were at heart Catholics ; but it was a great national and political question, in which every Englishman was naturally and deeply interested, viz. whether the kingdom should become subject to foreigners, the Scotch and the French, or retain its ancient independence at any cost under Elizabeth. This position of affairs gave notorious advantages to Burghley in carrying out his anti-Catholic policy, and he was certainly not slow to use them. For more than eighteen long and wearisome years the Queen of Scotland, who came as a guest, had been kept in captivity. disaffection, and of the power of Rome against England. The same cause compelled her execution." — Introduction, p. 26, to Documents from Simancas relating to the Jxcign of Queen Elizabeth, edited by Spencer Hall, F.S.A. London, 1865. 236 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. The treatment Her Majesty received, judged of, not by liistorical romances of anti-Christian or Protestant historians, called upon to bolster up a bad cause, but by the actual MS. letters of those more immediately engaged in harassing her, is such that, after the lapse of three centuries and more, the queen's trials stand out from the thick darkness around, and she becomes deserving of the truest and most profound sympathy. She was often treated most insolently and cruelly by her keepers. Beset with spies, and surrounded with enemies anxious to please Elizabeth, Queen Mary's life must have been a burden. On one occasion, Amias Poulet, her gaoler, because she refused to open her private cabinet for his inspection, threatened to break it open with bars.^ Upon this the queen produced the keys. Poulet then rifled it, and took possession of its contents for his mistress. At the age of forty-three Queen Mary's hair had become perfectly white. Yet her noble Christian virtues of constancy and fortitude were always remarkable ; and, by the grace of the Most Highest, her spirit never gave way. Many influential foreigners were horrified at the treatment she received, and so expressed themselves, to the intense annoyance of Elizabeth. Queen Mary's allies and partisans, both in Scotland and England (as they were bound to do), made several attempts to aid her, — they would have been unworthy of the honour of her friendship had they done less, — but their plans were either ill-laid, or, by the instrumentality of government spies and false friends, were cleverly defeated. Eventually Sir Francis Walslngham succeeded in entangling a number of young Catholic gentlemen — Salisbury, Tichbourne, Travers, Barnewall, Tilney, AVindsor, and others'- — in a scheme which was known as " Babington's Plot," and which apparently involved a plan for dethroning Elizabeth.^ Pooley and Gilbert ^ " After many denials, many exclamations, and many bitter words against you (I say nothing of her railing against myself), with flat affirmation that Her Majesty might have her body, but her heart she should never have ; refusing to deliver the key of her cabinet, I called my servants and sent for bars to break open the door, whereupon she yielded ; and causing the door to be opened, I found there in the coffers mentioned in Mr. Ward's remem- brance five rolls of canvas containing five thousand French crowns, and two leather bags, whereof the one had in gold one hundred and four pounds, two shillings," etc. — The Letttr-book of Sir Amias Poulet. — Fotilet to Walsingham, p. 2S9. London, 1874. - For an account of their trial, %qq State Trials, vol. i. jiji. 64-71. London, 1720. •* Babington had been in France recently, and had brought letters for Mary, and, in return, she is stated in his indictment to have written letters to him, ' in which she not only signified that she allowed and approved of such BABINGTON S PLOT. 23/ Giffard, though with other professed sentiments and trusted by Mary's friends, were the secret agents of the Secretary of State, and, as the plot developed, deliberately betrayed the trust reposed in them. Letters which passed amongst the Scottish queen's allies were opened by Thomas Phillips, a noted reader of cypher- writing, engaged by Walsingham, and an agent thoroughly adroit in the art of counterfeiting seals ; they were read, copied, and then sent on to the person for whom they were intended, so that evidence of the plot in writing might be duly obtained. By such tactics Walsingham secured such information as enabled him in some way to connect Queen Mary with Babington, and eventu- ally to bring about her death on the scaffold. Babington and his thirteen allies were accused of concocting a plot to murder the queen, and of a conspiracy to raise a rebellion in favour of Mary. Seven of the prisoners acknowledged their guilt ; of the other seven, five were convicted. Two successive days, Septem- ber 2oth and 21st, were appointed for their execution. Their punishment was to be drawn, hung, and quartered, and this, it is to be feared, was done with the deliberate intention of inflicting as much pain as possible.^ The queen degraded herself by expressing a particular wish that they might suffer some kind of death more barbarous and excruciating than the ordinary horrors referred to. To this it was objected, by the law officers, that such an alteration or addition would be illegal. She then con- sented that the existing law should have its course, on the express condition that the executions were " protracted to the extremitie of payne " in the sufferers, and in the face of the populace. On the first day the hanging of each was by deliberate intention a mere pretence, for they were only half-choked or strangled a little, and then promptly cut down alive. The detailed cruelties of the executioners which ensued, with their savage slowness, and bloody knives, were endured by these generous youths with noble patience ; but the populace, horribly disgusted, became so excited at such deliberate barbarity, that, on the morrow, the others were hung till they were quite dead, and then dismembered, disem- bowelled, and quartered as usual. To return to Queen Mary. Some of the letters made use of, intended treasons, but therein also urged and solicited Babington and his confederates, by promises of great reward, to fulfil the same." The truth of this assertion, as regards any design on the life of Elizabeth, is very doubtful ; but it answered the purpose of the framers of the A<;sociation, and it was forthwith resolved to proceed to the judicial murder of the unhappy prisoner. Her secretaries (Nau and Curie) and her papers were seized, and both sub- jected to rigid examination. 1 See Howell's State JYials, vol. i. pp. 1126-115S. 238 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. and from which the English Council acted, were no doubt forgeries ; for the gospellers and leaders of the so-called " Refor- mation " were adepts at the art of forgery. And it seems quite reasonable that, if Babington and his allies had determined on accomplishing that of which they were ^ suspected, they would at least have exercised ordinary prudence in their plans and arrangements. The Earl of Leicester, who was not without experience on the subject, had recommended that the Queen of the Scots should be secretly poisoned, and had even sent a Protestant minister to Sir Francis W'alsingham to prove logically that, in accordance with the teaching of Scripture, a queen who is an idolatress deserves nothing short of death. ^ Elizabeth, fearing the effect of a public trial and execution of the Queen of Scotland, com- plained that Sir Amias Poulet and Sir Drue Drury, did not somehow or another manage adroitly and secretly to shorten the life of Mary ; but, as these two knightly gaolers (as will be shown further on) appeared horrified at the suggested idea of assassination, there was nothing left but a trial and an exe- cution. On the nth of October 1586, preparations for the form of a trial were commenced and gone through at Fotheringhay Castle in Northamptonshire. Includmg the Lord Chancellor and Burghley the Lord Treasurer, Henry Grey, Earl of Kent, and George Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, no less than twenty-five peers arrived as actors in the tragedy. A letter from Queen Elizabeth was delivered to Mary, announcing the purport of these formal proceedings, who, on seeing it, composedly remarked that she was sorry to be charged with that of which she was innocent; and reminded those present that she too was a queen, and in no way amenable to foreign jurisdiction. Her Majesty requested the Chancellor to explain what -Avas meant by his mistress's extraordinary and inaccurate expression, that she was " living in England under Elizabeth's protection," but he evaded giving any answer to so pertinent and difficult a question. For some time she refused to plead ; but, after Sir Christopher Hatton had suggested that with some persons such action might imply guilt, she reluctantly consented to defend herself. This last resolution was surely a mistake. The formal charge was two-fold : first, that she had conspired 1 The Protestant literature of the period (too profane and offensive to quote) is all based on the gross assumption that " Eucharistic Adoration," as it is now termed by certain English Churchmen, is flagrant idolatry ; and that idolaters ought not to be suffered to live. MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS. 239 with traitors and foreigners to procure the invasion of the reahn ; and secondly, that she had hkewise conspired to bring about the death of the queen. The first charge Mary dechned to allow, for it was obviously inadmissible. English statutes could not in any way bind one who was not an English subject, but the sovereign of another realm. She, as the Queen of Scots, was the equal of Elizabeth ; and between such there was no other law than the law of nature. That law fully justified her in seeking to secure her liberty. And who, after all these late years of trial and sufferings,— what man could blame her, if she received such aid as had been tendered her, in the hope of securing her deliverance from an unjust and shameful captivity? With regard to the second charge, she firmly and emphatically denied it with tears ; calling God the Trinity to witness of its utter falseness and of her own innocency. Here, be it noted, that only copies of the intercepted letters in the Babington case were produced ; the originals were not forthcoming, nor was the accuracy of the copies used either asserted or proved. Friend- less, and almost alone, this poor lady, worn with sufferings and sorrow, had been in confinement for no less than nineteen years. With no knowledge of law, and unaccustomed to judicial pro- cesses, she was no match for the low-minded upstarts and unscrupulous lawyers who pretended to sit in judgment upon her. All that trickery could accomplish, forgery compass,^ and contrivance devise, was devised and accomplished to secure her death. Intense hatred of the Christian religion, and a fear of its being restored again in its integrity, had much to do in giving point and purpose to the aims of the commissioners.^ Moreover, this desolate lady was not only refused the aid of all counsel or witnesses in her defence, but even of her own papers, which, after her caskets and coffers had been secretly broken open and rifled, were stolen and denied her. As regards certain copies of letters produced, "she protested," 'as Lord Burghley himself admits, "that the points of the letters which concerned the 1 "That Babington's conspiracy was with with the privity {ciivi scientuY) of Mary." — Sentence of the Commissioners. - " Forgeiy (I blush for the honour of Protestantism while I write it) seems to have been peculiar to the Reformed. ... I look in vain for one of those accursed outrages of imposition amongst the disciples of Popery. "^Dr. Whitaker's Vindication of Queen Mary, vol. iii. p. 2. And again, the same writer, on pp. 45, 46, and 54, writes: " Forgery seems to have been the peculiar disease of Protestantism," etc., to the same effect. 3 As Camden put on record : when Lord Buckhursc pronounced judgment upon the queen, he clearly admitted as much, for he bade Her Majesty "look for no mercy, seeing that her life was incompatible with the safety of the Protestant religion." 240 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. practice against the Queen's Majesty's person, were never by her [Mary] written, nor of her knowledge." ^ Eabington alone could have told the truth, and him they had already put to death. The attempts made by Walsingham and others to inculpate Mary's own servants and attendants failed. Some of these on oath denied the perverted interpretation put upon their words. The Court was then adjourned to Westminster, where, on the 29th of October, after much legal chicanery and contemptible shuffling, they found the Queen of Scots guilty. On the following day, Sir Amias Poulet informed her that as she was now dead to the law, she had no right to any of the insignia of royalty. He, therefore, made her servants remove the cloth of estate, dais, and canopy ; and then with ill-bred and unmannerly insolence, not looked for from a Somersetshire gentle- man, he covered himself and sat down in the queen's presence. In place of the royal arms of Scotland, the queen's servants, at her command, put up some engravings of Our Saviour's Passion and death, which Poulet wrote of as "stuff." He further told the queen, that "as a woman in her situation could not need further recreation," he should at once remove her billiard-table, which was done. As she informed the Archbishop of Glasgow, she felt keenly these premeditated and unworthy insults; and wrote to Elizabeth, calling such action useless cruelty. No notice seems to have been taken of the Scottish queen's reasonable complaint. A wise cunning secured its being ig- nored. Elizabeth, however, on learning Avhat the commissioners had done, appeared to be extremely rtluctant to go a step further and to sign the death-warrant, as well she might be ; for the whole proceedings had been conducted on the principle that as Mary, who had been the English queen's guest, was thus her prisoner, she was justified, now that Mary was in her power, in taking away her life. Both Burghley and Walsingham saw, and put their opinions on record,'' that without such a step they them- selves stood in grave danger — as no doubt would have been the case — if the old Catholic party could by any means have once again secured the upper hand. Throughout Europe a thrill of horror ran, when the proceedings at Fotheringhay — for a short time kept secret and for a much longer misrejjresented — were first made known ; and it reijuired all the arts of dissimulation and 1 Lord Burgliley to Secretary Davison, October 15. — E///s' Letters, pp. I11-112. - State Papers. Sir F. Walsingham to Lord Shrewsliury, October 6th, and Lord Burghley to Lord Leicester, dated October 26th, 15S6. TREATMENT OF QUEEN MARY. 24T double-dealing of Elizabeth's confidential advisers to remove the bad impression which these illegal and unprecedented proceed- ings ^ had produced. In truth, it may be gravely and certainly doubted whether such was removed. But for Elizabeth's hesitation there were no doubt some grounds. True, the Spanish king was well enough engaged in Flanders ; the French monarch, greatly perplexed and engaged with religious wars at home, was practically powerless ; but there was the danger of driving the Catholics and Mary's allies to desperation, as well as some dread of the well-deserved infamy which, accurately enough, she knew would cover (as it most righteously has covered) her name, because of this iniquity. Elizabeth herself had suggested assassination, but it had been of f no avail ; her friend Leicester, with equal futility, had hinted at poison ; but neither assassin nor poisoner had been forthcoming. Anyhow, therefore, if the execution must take place, it should be done either privately without the queen's cognisance, or else in response to a specific request for the same from Parliament. This was planned for, and soon cleverly arranged. The Lords and Commons, duly manipulated and sufficiently sanctified by the sacred presence of six grave ministers in lawn sleeves and satin, '■^ joined in a solemn petition that the sentence of the commissioners might speedily be carried into effect, for the honour of God and the safety and glory of the realm. When, as some pointed out, idol-worshippers and ir;ass-mongers com- bined to plot against the Lord's anointed, it was certainly ^ On this point a high-principled author of the last century thus writes : — "The judges in Queen Mary's case were not to act by reasons of State, bat by rules of law and justice ; and the whole course of the proceedings, in taking the confessions of men who were executed, and might have been kept alive ; of persons who were then alive, and might have been brought to the trial ; in proving letters by copies, and producing no originals ; in condemn- ing a sovereign princess, who had been so long imprisoned for using every means (but those of assassination, which were not proved) to recover her liberty ; these things were not easily reconcilable to the laws of England, or laws of nations ; and therefore I am glad not to find Lord Willoughby's name in the Commission." — Memoir of Peregrine Bertie, eleventh Lord IVilloughhy de Eresby, etc., p. 61, London, 1838. - Lord Burghley wrote to Davison, as follows, on the 9th of November 1586: — "Yesterday, in the Parliament, grew a question whether it was convenient for the two Archbishops (Whitgift and Sandys) and four other bishops to accompany the other Lords Temporal in their petition to Her Majesty for execution of the Scottish Queen. Some scruple I had whether Her Majesty would like it, because in former times the bishops in Parlia- ment were wont to absent themselves. Yet I do not think [it] unlawful for them to be present and persuaders in such causes, as the execution tend to the state of the Church, as this doth." — State Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. cxcv. n. 1 1. 242 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. time to act. The bishops were unctuous in their phrases and ])ortentously solemn in their long - winded warnings. Their lordships, as they asserted, had nothing at heart, but the pure and unadulterated Gospel. This alone was their comfort, their hope, and their reward. As the speaker, with such profound biblical knowledge impressively pointed out. Her Majesty should beware of foolishly and wickedly imitating Saul, who had spared Agag, or King Ahab, who had failed to put Benhadad to death. One, Sir James Croft, whose nauseous cant and hypocrisy were super-eminent, moved that some earnest and devout prayer to God the Holy Spirit might be made, to incline Her Majesty's too tender heart to grant this their reasonable petition ; and asked that this devout prayer might be speedily printed, as well for daily use in Parliament — so anxious for direct enlightenment from Heaven — as for all the members thereof in their private devotions at home.^ The queen in a similar spirit — disgusting because of its obvious insincerity and hypocrisy — on receiving the petition and hearing of the devotional exercises of the Commons, took up the idea thus suggested, and replied, with corresponding cant, that she likewise must take time to deliberate and also betake herself to prayer at the throne of grace. She, too, "com- mended herself to be directed by God's Spirit ; " while the Lord Chancellor, in answer to an assertion from Elizabeth, that it was desirable that some expedient should be devised for the safety of the kingdom, short of the judicial murder of the sovereign of an adjoining kingdom, which she dreaded, — informed her that any such unwise and disastrous expedient was to be avoided, and could not possibly be adopted. It was the block and the axe and the Queen of Scots' decapitation and death which were needed. Nothing less. Lord Buckhurst was consequently enjoined to inform Queen Mary of the unanimous judgment of the commissioners, now ratified by Parliament, and of the joint petition of both houses to Elizabeth. Sir Amias Poulet, her gaoler, and Robert Beale, Clerk of the Council, accompanied him. His lordship told her that it was quite vain and useless to look for mercy, for her notorious attachment to Popery, mass-monger- ing, and idol worship rendered her life wholly incompatible with the safety and security of the new religion ; and insultingly offered the services of the Bishop or Dean of Peterborough to enable her to prepare for death. ^ See D^ Ewes' /oitrnal 0/ //w Votes, Spccc/ies, and Debates during t/tc Reign of Elizabeth, pp. 491-404. London, 1682. HER DIGNIFIED POSITION AND ACTION. 243 She replied with dignity that the judgment was wholly lacking in justice ; that she had never sought the least injury to, much less the murder of, the English queen ; that her true crime was evidently her religion, for which she was perfectly ready to die ; and that she must altogether decline the aid of the ministers in question. She asked and secured the services of her own almoner, and then wrote three letters, entrusting them to her servant, one to the Holy Father, another to the Archbishop of Glasgow, and a third to the Duke of Guise. In London — where public opinion, so far as it then existed, had been for several months corrupted by false news, and by groundless alarms deliberately circulated — the proclamation was with due formalities made public. The bells of the churches rang merry peals ; in some instances the parish ministers "gave God the thanks " ; bonfires blazed at Westminster, Clerkenwell Green, and Tower Hill ; the more depraved creatures of the Court appeared in a state of frenzied ecstasy. \\'alsingham told Lord Shrewsbury that it was to be hoped that the queen might be moved by these " earnest instances, to proceed thor- oughly in this cause." This man's hope, alas ! was all too soon realised. In a letter to Elizabeth, the Queen of Scots made four dying requests : first, that her dead body might be taken to France, and placed beside her mother's tomb ; secondly, that she might send a jewel, with her maternal blessing, to her son James,^ ; thirdly, that her servants might have a free passage home and retain the legacies she intended to leave them ; and fourthly, that she might not be put to death in private, lest her enemies should assert that she had ended her days in despair, or had not died in the CathoHc faith. In this dignified letter, there is throughout no expression whatsoever which can be twisted into anything like a plea or petition for mercy. She regrets the suppression of her own letters before the Commission, a most shameful act of injustice ; and ventures to remind Elizabeth that the day would come when she herself would have to give an account of her actions before a just and unerring Judge. It was a touching and true letter, in every respect worthy of the high character and noble antecedents of this royal sufferer; and its 1 "From her own son she might have hoped [for] some sense of duty, some desire to save. But when this so-called Scottish Solomon — as being the son of David — heard of the trial, he simply remarked, ' Mary must drink the ale she has brewed.' When he consulted his Council, the Earl of Both- well told him roundly he deserved to be hanged the day after, if he allowed the execution to take place." — Dociuncnts from Siviancas, Introduction, p. 28. London, 1S65. 244 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. perusal brought tears to the colourless face of Elizabeth, as Lord Leicester informed Walsingham. But, with unroyal discour- tesy and unwomanly harshness, no notice whatsoever was taken of it. No answer was returned. The King of France, on hearing what had taken place, at once sent M. de Bellievre to expostulate with Elizabeth, but for some time she carefully avoided seeing him. Fraud and cunning met the king's agent at every step he took in endeavouring to accomplish his mission. At last he was enabled to inform her, face to face, that his royal master would most strongly and earnestly resent the execution of Queen Mary. " Sir, have you the authority of your sovereign to employ such language to us?" " Yes, madam," he replied, " I have. For the king, my master, expressly commanded me to use it." " Is your authority signed with his own hand ? " " It is, madam." "Then I require you," responded the queen, "to testify as much in your writing." This he did ; upon which Elizabeth resolved to reply by letter, which she promised to send in due course. In that she assumed a lofty spirit, and rebuked the king with Tudor vigour for what she asserted was his uncalled-for interference. The resident French Ambassador, as well as Queen Mary's son James — the latter by the intervention of Sir Robert Keith, Sir Robert Melville, and the Master of Gray (some at heart enemies of Mary,) endeavoured to avert the coming deed of iniquity, but all in vain. Their expostulations and suggestions were treated with marked contempt. On the I St of February 1581, a letter was sent to Sir Amias Poulet at Fotheringhay, jointly signed by Sir Francis Walsingham and William Davison,^ which charged them, at Elizabeth's sug- gestion, with lack of care for her service ; for had it been other- wise, they would have long ago, in some way or another, killed and got rid of the royal captive. Of her guilt, after the trial, they ought to have no doubt ; while the oath of association, which they had already taken, should have perfectly cleared their consciences before God, and their good repute in the eyes of their fellows. Sir Amias Poulet, though a sour and bigoted anti-Catholic, and accurately enough perceiving that Queen Mary was no friend ^ See "Note" to this chapter, in which the letter in question, and some other subsequent communications throwing much light upon its meaning, are given at length. HER SUFFERINGS AND DEATH. 245 to the new religion, was too honest and inteUigent to sacrifice his conscience to Elizabeth's will. He could never make so foul a shipwreck of his conscience, he replied, nor leave so great a blot on his posterity, as to shed blood without law or warrant. Drury, his co-gaoler, he added, was of a like mind. The queen, as Davison her secretary soon discovered, was intensely annoyed at the reply of Poulet and Drury, and burst out into loud expressions of anger and vexation, well garnished with her favourite oaths, at their scrupulousness. The commis- sion for Queen Mary's execution, however, had been duly signed on the I St of February, and despatched by Beale to Fotheringhay. Immediately prior to this period, the Scotch ambassador had been urgently asking a brief delay of eight days before the sealing and signing of the death-warrant. But Elizabeth, tortured in conscience, worried with expostulations, and fearing further dis- cussion, once again swearing a profane oath, savagely replied, " No, not for one hour." The death-warrant reached Fotheringhay Castle on a cold and bleak day in the early part of February. The Earls of Kent and Shrewsbury, who brought it, were introduced into Queen Mary's presence at once, and read the illegal sentence. "My lords," she answered, "the day long looked for and long desired has come at last. And what better end can I have than to render up my life for my faith ? For thus, and because of this it is that I am to suffer. Nevertheless, as to having compassed the death of the queen, your sovereign," she continued, placing her right palm on a New Testament which lay open upon her table, " note my latest words : I call the living God to witness that I neither sought it nor even imagined it." " Madam," interposed the Earl of Kent, " that book there is a Popish testament, not Christ's free and blessed Gospel. An oath on such a book is of no value." " It is a Catholic book," she exclaimed, " and for this reason I value it all the more, and you ought the more to regard my oath taken upon it." " Madam," continued the earl, "your life must have been the death of our new religion, while your death — God grant it ! — will be the Hfe of it." " Heard you that ? " asked the queen of her attendants. " My Lord of Kent has now betrayed the secret. It is my religion, then. It is my religion," she repeated, with intense emphasis on the word "religion," "which is the cause of my death." She then requested the assistance of a priest and the aid of her confessor ; but this, she was informed, was not only contrary 246 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. to the law of the land, but repugnant to the principles of the Queen's Highness's religion and the restored Gospel, and danger- ous to the souls and bodies of the commissioners. They could not possibly tolerate confession, idolatry, massing, nor superstition. Her reasonable request, therefore, was thus cruelly and shame- fully denied. Its denial abundantly serves to show to what practical infamy Elizabeth's despicable tools had descended. The last night of Queen JNIary's earthly life, when necessary business was despatched, waa spent in self-recollection, medita- tion on Our Blessed Redeemer's Passion, and in mental prayer. If the Sacraments of the Church were denied her,^ — those divinely-appointed aids for gaining strength to pass the valley of the shadow of death securely — yet, when these were intentionally refused or could not be had, her holy religion abundantly sus- tained her soul in these latest trials. She slept but little, she ate sparingly; and, when not engaged in her religious duties, bade farewell, with kind words and some suitable memorials for all, to her devoted and sorrow-smitten servants. On their knees they asked forgiveness for all their defects and shortcomings. She, on her part, forgave them cheerfully ; and in turn asked their forgiveness likewise. She then gave them her hand to kiss. This parting touched all even to tears. The remembrance of it would remain green and fresh as long as life lasted. The doors of the great hall of Fotheringhay Castle were thrown open about seven. It was lit up within by a few pendant lamps. Outside, from a very early hour, Thomas Andrews, SheritT of the shire, and several gentlemen of the county, with their retainers, on whose countenances the impress of sorrow was stamped, had long waited for admittance in the chilling cold of a February morning. The fog lay heavily all around ; the mists were thick, the ground white with frost. Many seemed terribly depressed ; the silence amongst those gathered was solemn and trying. Soon, however, the augmented guard of the castle passed in, and then nearly two hundred spectators, pressing forwards, filled the hall, save in its centre, on every side. At eight in the morning Queen Mary entered the hall dressed in robes of state, bearing a book of devotions and an ivory crucifix in her hands, and attended by two of her ladies. These latter, however, were thrust back by force, and the doors of the hall closed. ^ Conn, in his Life of the Queen, asserts that, by virtue of an indult from Pope Pius v., she administered the Holy Eucharist to herself on the mornini^ of her execution ; but this, judging by her own letter to that Pontift", is evidently a misconception. DETAILS OF THE SAME. 247 When her attendants had been forced out, and their wailing Avas heard throughout the hall, Mary quietly remarked — "Certainly the queen your mistress, being a maiden, will vouchsafe in regard to womanhood that I have some of my own women about me when I die." A silence that might have been felt pervaded the whole assembly. As the queen spoke anew no one stirred. But from the commissioners there was no response. "You might, I think, grant me a far greater courtesy were I a woman of lesser calling than the Queen of Scots." The Earl of Kent winced. Observing that the authorities were looking at each other askance, and seeing some of them much cowed, she continued with greater vigour — "Am not I your queen's own cousin, a descendant of the blood-royal of Henry VII., a married Queen of France, and the anointed Queen of Scotland ? " At this the Earl of Kent relented ; the two ladies were hastily readmitted, together with four of the officers of her household. Melville, her old steward, overcome with grief on his admission, fell upon his knees in a paroxysm of sorrow, unable to speak. " Good Master Melville," she said, giving him her hand to kiss, and raising him up, "cease to lament for me, for this day thou shalt see the certain end of Mary Stuart's troubles." She then graciously kissed him on the cheek. Her two ladies-in-waiting, Jane Kennedy and Elspeth Curie, were permitted to remain with her, but her Majesty's reiterated request to see her clerical almoner, Le Preau, was again cruelly refused;^ the lords "not thinking it proper to waste so much time about a priest." At the same time one of them heartlessly remarked that her beads, her Agtms Dei, and the crucifix she carried were, in their judgment, "superstition enough already." - The preparations for her death, the raised and railed platform in the middle of the dark-draped hall, the covered block, the axe, and the masked executioner in black velvet, never caused her to tremble, even when, in all their startling solemnity, they first met her gaze. With no quailing she advanced with her accustomed stately grace and majesty to the centre of the hall. Poulet assisted her to mount the scaffold, on which she said, " I thank you, sir. It is the last trouble I shall give you, and the 1 In her letter to her confessor she complains bitterly of the cruelty of her enemies in refusing her his spiritual aid, and earnestly solicits his prayers. " The Earl of Kent and Robert Beale, in their official account sent to the Lords of the Council, thus put on record this fact: — "Shee demaunded to speake with her prieste, which was denyed unto her, the rather for that she came with a superstityous paire of beades and a crucifix." — See Sir Henry Ellis' Original Letters, 2nd series, pp. 111-113. ^ 248 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. most acceptable service you have ever done me." ^ She then seated herself on a stool prepared for her, during the reading of the warrant. Here the queen addressed those assembled, in her clear and beautiful voice, which throughout, even to her latest and last most pious aspirations, had never failed nor faltered. In brief and pregnant sentences of no ambiguity, for the last time she solemnly protested her innocence of all plots against Queen Elizabeth's life,"' and maintained her unshaken fidelity to the one ancient faith, which she thanked God she was thus enabled publicly to confess.. She reminded all present that she herself was a sovereign princess, in no way subject to the English Parliament, but brought there to suffer by injustice and violence. "After my death," she declared, "many things at present hidden in darkness will come to life. Rejoicing to shed my blood for my religion," — for she knew well enough why she was about to suffer death,— "I place all my hope and confidence in Him, my gracious Lord, Whose image I hold in my hand. I pardon all mine enemies, whom my latest words shall not prejudice, from the bottom of my heart ; and from all to w^hom I have done amiss or given offence, I humbly ask pardon, likewise." Upon this Dr. Fletcher, Dean of Peterborough, pushing himself forward, began a preachment, in which he contrived to be at once coarse, canting, and insulting. This was the burden of his words : — His royal mistress, the supreme and beneficent Gover- ness of them all, was bound to execute justice on the body of the condemned one, but, like a mother to all, was most anxiously watchful for tiie good of her soul. Elizabeth, as he asserted, had therefore commissioned him to bring her into that fold, in which the true sheep were fed on Gospel-truth ; and to induce ^ On the very same day this man thus wrote to Mr. William Davison : — "Sir Drue Drury, with his hearty due commendations unto you, prayeth your favtnirable mean for his revocation, whicli he would not desire (notwith- standing his great and urgent occasions) if the cause of his abode were not ihroui^h the vte7ry and favour of onr good God clear/y removed, to the girat comfort of Id »t self and all oilier faithful Christian subjects. I will say nothing of his careful service in this place, because his zeal to religion, duty to his sovereign, and love to his country are very well known unto you. The children of God have daily experience of His mercy and favour towards such as can he content to depend on His merciful providence, Who doth not see as man seeth, but His times and seasons are always just and perfectly good. The same Cod make 11s all thankful for his late sim^iilar fa-ivurs \_i.e. the murder of the queen ! !], and thus I leave to trouble you, wishing you all felicity in Our Lord Jesus. From Fotheringhay, the 8th of P'ebruary 1586." — Letter-book of Sir Ainias Poiilet, pp. 364-365. London, 1874. - In her written letter to the King of France — penned just before her death — she declares that she dies quite innocent of any crime against Elizabeth. QUEEN MARY BROUGHT TO THE BLOCK. 249 her to renounce the communion of that idolatrous and apostate Church, which by law had been abolished, and in which if she remained and died, she would be most certainly damned. Queen Mary, thus persecuted by this repulsive and extravagant fanatic, entreated him on such an occasion to hold his tongue and let her be at peace. But he was not to be put down. Though she quietly turned away from him and his disquieting noise, which was all she could do ; yet he went round to another part of the platform, stared at her, thumbed his Bible, selected his text, and began his disturbing utterances once again. At last Lord Shrewsbury, who saw that the onlookers were much wanting in sympathy with the preacher, suggested that he should give over preaching and proceed to prayer. He did so at once. His prayer, however, was only the same sermon put into other words. He exclaimed, he lifted up his voice, and he cursed. But Mary heard him not. Engrossed in devotion, she was repeating the beautiful Psalms, Beati quorum. Miserere, and that of Compline, Qui habitat, during the Dean's "exercise" as it was termed; when one of the peers, touched by the creature's heartless cruelty, suggested that he should stop and stand aside. He did so. The queen then arose, and uttering a most touching interces- sion for the afflicted Catholics of the country, for her son James, and for Queen Elizabeth, heard by all in painful silence, held up her crucifix and exclaimed — "As Thine arms, O Blessed Saviour of the World, were stretched out upon the Cross, so now, O Lord, receive me into the arms of Thy mercy and forgive me all my sins." " ALidam," retorted the Earl of Kent,^ " leave alone such Popish trumpery ; and bear Christ rather in your heart than in your hand." " I cannot hold in my hand the representation of His Passion,'^ she meekly but firmly replied, " without at the same time bear- ing Him in my heart." Upon this her two maids, bathed in tears, began to disrobe 1 This man (Henry Grey, sixth Earl of Kent) was of an ancient family ; but evidently a person in great want of good breeding. His grandfather, one of Henry VIH.'s favourites, became so inveterate a gamester, that he impoverished his estate, and died ignobly at the George Inn in Lombard Street in 1523. The sixth earl, his grandson, was a sour Puritan of a bad type. He married an old woman and died uithout lawful issue. Sir William Dugdale wrote of him in very mild terms that "he evinced much more zeal" for Queen Mary's "destruction than befitted a person of honour." Like many other of the base peers of that period he was in truth a disgrace to his race, rank, and dignity. 250 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. her. But the executioners interfered, as it was said to be their duty, and they looked for certain perquisites. The sight of the queen thus being prepared for death touched to the heart a large number of the spectators. Her servants were greatly overcome. One was in paroxysms of grief. But her Majesty bade them bear up with fortitude, gave them her parting blessing, and asked their prayers. One of them placed a handkerchief over her eyes, upon which the headsman and his assistant guided her towards the block. Kneeling down, she exclaimed repeatedly, " Into thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit." Save these beautiful words, nothing was heard but the sobs and groans of the onlookers. And now the executioner raised the axe. But the sounds of weeping evidently disconcerted him. It fell with a flash, and inflicted a deep wound on the skull. The poor sufferer never moved. At his third stroke the head of the saindy queen rolled on to the scaffold. The deed of shame and infamy was now complete. Holding it up, as usual, he cried out — as a shudder ran through the crowd at the sickening sight, and a wail of agony arose— " God save Queen Elizabeth ! " " Amen ! " responded the dignified minister who had been cut short in his preaching, "and so may all her enemies perish ! " "So perish all the enemies of the Gospel!" exclaimed the Earl of Kent, throwing up his velvet cap as a token of satisfac- tion. But there was no single response, no one said " Amen." Pity, admiration, and sympathy now filled the hearts of many, as the sobs which were heard indicated ; for truth and justice had been grossly outraged by the murder then committed by Elizabeth ; ^ while the repulsive cant which had been there exhibited sickened to the heart's core several of the red-eyed onlookers, whose secret sympathies were against the innovators and their cruel policy of tyranny and blood ; and w^ho deplored all the evil conse(iuences which were seen to exist, by reason thereof,— and which, though years have intervened, still live on. The queen's body, after embalmment, was buried some months 1 To use the words of Whitaker, the accomplished historian, Elizabeth was one "who had no sensibilities of tenderness and no sentiments of generosity ; who looked not forward to the awful verdict of History ; and who shuddered not at the infinitely more awful doom of God. I blush, as an Englishman, to think that this was done by an English queen, and one whose name I was taught to lisp in my infancy as the honour of her sex and the glory of our isle." HOW HER DEATH WAS BROUGHT ABOUT. 25 I afterwards at Peterborough/ but subsequently removed by her son James- to Henry VII. 's chapel at Westminster. William Davison, one of the Secretaries of State, — who throughout these proceedings had been the tool of Queen Mary's enemies, and had thus seen the bloody deed, which they had so artfully planned, completed, — was sacrificed,^ in order that, when the opinion of Catholic Europe was expressed — as the Court agents abroad informed them it soon might be — a scape- goat should be at hand to bear their dark and weighty sins. The queen had been specially angry with Lord Burghley, and he was in sore disgrace. But, as he declared to Her Majesty, he submitted wholly to her blessed will ; she was as light and life to him ; and thus endeavoured to soothe her by quoting texts of Scripture or by nauseous flattery.^ His mock humility was so ably assumed and so artfully exhibited, that he was soon restored to favour. Davison alone suffered. He was tried in the Star Chamber, condemned to pay a fine of ten thousand pounds, and imprisoned for years. But these tactics did not shield the queen from the strong condemnation she so richly and righteously deserved. In the year of Grindal's resignation — to turn awhile to the other side of the picture — Father Cornelius,-^ a Cornishman of Irish extraction, came back to England — one amongst the 1 The Puritans were extremely angry that Bishop William Wickham of Lincoln, who preached her IMajesty's funeral sermon, did not openly declare his conviction of "her certain damnation." — See Fuller's Church History, book ix. p. 181. - The most scandal'ius case of dissimulation, falsehood, and hypocrisy which is on record is that in which the queen, writing to James the son of Mary Queen of Scots, makes a solemn appeal to Heaven that she was entirely innocent of his mother's death ; and, furthermore, that she held in abhorrence the sins of hypocrisy and dissimulation. 2 Of Davison's policy, under the charge against him, Dr. Lingard thus wrote : " In court he acted with more reserve than prudence. To the invectives of the Crown lawyers he replied, that to acknowledge the offence would be to tarnish his own reputation ; to contend with his Sovereign would be to transgress the duty of a subject ; that they did him injustice by reading garbled passages from his answer, let them read the wh.)le, or rather let them read none : for it contained secrets not iit for the public ear ; he would only say that he had acted under the persuasion that he was obeying the Queen's commands, and for the rest would throw himself on her mercy."— History of England, by John Lingard, D.D., vol. vi. p. 232. Dublin, 1874. ^ See Strype's Annals, vol. iii. p. 371, and Appendices Nos. 144-146. 5 Father John Cornelius, alias Mohun, was born at Bodmin, in Cornwall, of poor parents. Sir John Arundell of Traherne, an "occasional conformist," gave him an education at Oxford, but he subsequently went to I-iheims under Dr. Allen, and afterwards to the English college at Rome. Having been ordained priest, he came back to England in 15S3, and gained his rest and 252 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. numerous adherents to the old religious system. He laboured assiduously and zealously for eleven years, during which he won for himself great admiration from men and many remarkable divine graces from Heaven, A sacred and solemn revelation, full of expressive teaching, was made to him, six years before his death, with regard to a deceased nobleman, thus : — "John, Lord Stourton, 1 who was a Catholic, had through fear in those terrible times conformed to the State religion, having greater regard for his temporal than for his spiritual and eternal interests. Lest, however, death should surprise him in this sad neglect of his duty he entertained two priests in his house ; and had taken all imaginable precautions that both should never be absent at the same time, being fully resolved to die within the pale of the true Church. But God's inscrutable providence and just judgment did not allow this; for when he met with the accident which carried him off, both priests were absent at the same time, nor could the most anxious search discover where they were. Still, God in His great mercy infused into the baron's heart so lively a sense of the horror of his sin, and so deep a contrition, that, not satisfied with begging pardon of God and promising within his own mind amendment and satisfaction, he called together his wife and steward and all the family, and with floods of tears acknowledged before them his crime and the scandal he had given, declaring that he was willing to make amends were it even by shedding his blood. " He expressed his grief at being deprived of the rites of the Catholic Church when he most wished to receive them ; and protested that he died a Catholic, out of which religion there was no salvation. Then, imploring God's mercy, he expired. He not only besought them all to bear witness of this his act before both men and the dreadful tribunal of God, but even, it is said, made a confession of his sins to a servant man in sign of his sincere repentance, desiring thereby to testify his full determina- tion to have confessed to a priest, had time and opportunity permitted. " Father Cornelius, when asked his opinion if in this case it was lawful to pray for the deceased lord, replied that it was both lawful and obligatory." reward by suffering a cruel death at Dorchester on July 4th, 1594. He had ]ireviously been admitted to the Society of Jesus. — See ^tate Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. ccxlviii. n. 75, A. I). 1594. There is an original portrait of Father Cornelius at the Gesii, Rome. ' lohn, eighth Baron Stourton (whose wife was Frances, daughter of ^Vi^liam, Lord Cobham), died 13th October 1588. FATHER CORNELIUS AND MARGARET CLITIIEROE. 253 The following incident is related by Dame Dorothy Arundell, the half-sister of the deceased lord, in her "MS. Acts of the Blessed Martyr Cornelius " :— " One day my mother, Lady Arundell, begged Father Cornelius to offer up mass for the soul of her son John, Lord Stourton, which he consented to do. When at the altar he remained a considerable time in prayer between the consecration and the memento for the dead. After mass was finished, he made an exhortation on the words, Beati vwrtiii qui in Domitw moriuntiir — ' Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord,' — and then told us that he had just seen a vision. Before him was presented a forest of immense size, in which all was fire and flame, and in the midst he perceived the soul of the deceased lord, who, with tears and lamentable cries, accused himself of the evil life he had led for several years, especially whilst at the Court ; and his dis- simulation in frequenting the Protestant Church, though still _a Catholic, to the scandal and grievous hurt of the souls of his relations. But above all, in the most bitter terms, he accused himself of having been one of the forty-seven chosen by Queen Ehzabeth to condemn the innocent Mary, Queen of Scots, a crime for which he had experienced so deep a contrition that it had hastened his death. After these avowals of the deceased lord to Father Cornelius, he exclaimed in the words of Holy Scripture, Misereinini mei, viiseremini mei, saliem vos, a?nici mei, quia inafius Domini tetigit me — ' Have pity on me, have pity on me, O ! ye my friends, for the hand of the Lord hath touched me.' Having implored the Father to assist him with prayers, the appearance, by w-hich he had been recognised, vanished. " Father Cornelius wept much in relating his vision to us, and all the household, who to the number of about eighty per- sons were listening to him, united their tears with his. The server of the mass, John Carey, afterwards a sufferer for the Faith with Father Cornelius, saw and heard all that passed in the vision ; but as for myself and the rest of those present, we only perceived, while it was manifested, a glimmering reflection like that of live coals on the wall against which the altar stood." ^ The sufferings and death of Margaret Clitheroe, already referred to, must now be narrated at some length.- She was the 1 See Records of the English Province, vol. iii. pp. 444, 445 ; and Life of Father Weston, in The Troubles of Our Catholic Forefathers, 2nd series, pp. 128, 129. London, 1875. ^'^ account is also given by Bishop Challoner in his Memoirs of Missionary Priests. 2 The author is largely indebted for most of the facts related, to Father John Mush's Life of Margaret Clitheroe, as well as to Bishop Challoner's Memoirs of Alissionary Priests. 254 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. daughter of Thomas Middleton, citizen and wax-chandler of York, and sometime sheriff. He, there is good reason for beheving, was the third son of Esquire Middleton, of Stockeld,-"- and his wife Margaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Gascoigne of Gawthorpe. She married John Chtheroe,- a well-to-do tradesman of York, who became subsequently one of the city chamberlains. "As touching her worldly state and condition," as her bio- grapher declares, " she was about thirty years of age, and to her beautiful and gracious soul God gave her a body with comely face and beauty correspondent. She was of sharp and ready wit, with rare discretion in all her actions, a plentiful mother in children, and her husband of competent wealth and ability." She appears to have been brought up without any very definite religious belief; but, having heard of the sufferings endured by so many for the old religion, she attached herself thereto with great sincerity and devotion. Declining to attend the services of the Calvinists, she was several times imprisoned ; separated on two occasions for more than two years from husband and children. But, to quote her biographer again, "she turned all things to her good, and sucked honey out of the cruelty of her enemies. They persecuted, and she thereby learned patience ; they shut her up into close prison, and she learned thereby to forget and despise the world ; they separated her from home, children, and husband, and she thereby became familiar with God ; they sought to terrify her, and she thereby increased in most glorious constancy and fortitude." Her supposed offence was that she had harboured priests, and allowed mass to be said in her husband's house, and had sent her son Francis abroad to be educated in a foreign seminary. On March loth, 15 86, the vice-president of the Northern Council and others, therefore, authorised her house to be searched. The sheriffs officers coming suddenly and finding a youth, whom they stripped and threatened with rods, induced him to show them the priests' chamber, where they found a portable altar, a missal, some altar-breads, and "church-stuff," i.e. priestly vest- ments ; upon which discovery both she and her husband at once were committed to prison. ^ Sir William Middleton of Stockeld, Knt., had by Afargaret, his third wife, a son, Thomas. These Middletons were allied with the Vavasours, Wentworths, Calverleys, and Gascoignes. His grandson, William, signed the Pedigree in the Visitation of 1612 by Richard St. George. — See Foster's Yorkshire Pedigrees, p. 286. London, 1S75. - tie had a brother, William Clitheroe, who had been ordained subdeacon at Rheims, on jMarch 19, 15S0, deacon at Chalons, and priest at Soissons on June 9th, 15S2. IMARGARET CLITHEROE'S EXAMINATION. 255 She was arraigned four days afterwards, and brought from the castle to the common hall. She was there formally accused of having, contrary to the laws, harboured and maintained Jesuit and seminary priests, traitors to the Queen's Majesty, and that she had divers times idolatrously, wickedly, and unlawfully heard mass, etc. Mr. Justice Clinch, standing up, asked her thus, — " Margaret Clitheroe, how say you, are you guilty of the indictment, or no?" To which, with a smilmg face, she mildly replied, " I know of no offence whatsoever, of which I should confess myself guilty." "You have certainly harboured Jesuits and massing-priests, sure enemies to the Queen's Afajesty and the Gospel," retorted the judge. " I never maintained any enemies of the queen," she replied, "and God defend that I should." She thus declined, in a beautiful spirit of self-sacrifice, either to betray her friends, implicate members of her family, or injure those of the old clergy who had rendered her any spiritual aid. " How will you be tried?" his lordship again asked. " Having given no offence whatsoever, my lord, I need no trial,'' was her calm reply. " But you have offended against the statutes, as these monu- ments of superstition and idolatry plainly show," continued the judge, pointing to some sacred vessels and vestments which lay on the table ; "and, therefore, you must be tried, and at once." " If you say I have offended, and that I must be tried, I will be by none save but by God and your own consciences." Some officers of the court, taking up the albs and chasubles, here put them upon two common men ; who, being vested in mockery, seized two chalices and a handful of wafer-breads, made the sign of the cross in mockery, bowed down in derision, and then holding them up with wanton winks and coarse grimaces, exclaimed, " Behold your gods in whom you believe 1 " " How like you these vestments. Mistress Clitheroe ? " asked one of the bystanders who had thus witnessed the antics of these irreverent buffoons. "Well enough," she answered, "were they upon the backs of those who know how to use them to God's honour, as they were made." She still refused to be tried, or to give any other answer to that she had already made. The judges adjourned the court until the morrow, when she was again brought up, to whom the judge spoke thus — " Margaret Clitheroe, yesternight we passed you over without 256 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. judgment, hoping that you would be more conformable, and put yourself to the country ; otherwise you must needs have the law. We see no reason for this your refusal. There be but one witness, a youth, against you, and the country must consider your case." "In deed and in truth!" replied the prisoner, "you have no witnesses against me but a child ; and such, with a rod or an apple or a bag of figs, you can make to say what you will." "It is plain," remarked the judge, " that you had priests in your house ; for here be their pestilent garb and goods." " As for good Catholic priests, why should I not have them, if they come but to do me and others good ? " " They be all rascally traitors, idolaters, and rank deceivers of the queen's subjects," remarked Mr. Hurleston, one of the councillors. " God forgive you ! " replied the prisoner, with feeling ; " you could not say so did you know them. I know them to be virtuous men sent by God to aid us who need them, and to save our souls." She was again asked to plead ; but, with a combination of boldness and modesty, still refused to do so. Just as the judge was about to pass sentence, one of the new i)reachers, Wiggington by name, a noted Puritan, stood up and addressed his lordship with great earnestness. " Take heed what you do, my lord," said he. " You sit here to do true justice. This woman's case is touching life and death. You may not, either by God's law or by man's, condemn her to die on the slender witness of a mere boy. You should not judge her save on the credit of two or three sufficient men. Therefore, look to it, my lord, look to it. On your own head rests this cause." " I may do it by law," retorted the judge. " By what law ? " at once asked the preacher. " By the Queen's Majesty's law," replied the judge, " the only law we know of." " That may be," Wiggington answered ; " but not by God's law. And God's law none of us may pass over, neither the Queen's Majesty nor any beside." Margaret Clitheroe was once more requested to plead ; but again answered as before. On this, one Rhodes, a justice, is reported to have interfered, asking, " Why stand we here all the day over tliis nauglity woman ? Let us with no more ado despatch her." This was determined on. Those in court, behind the barriers, and in distant corners, the interested onlookers, stretched themselves forward with anxiety to hear the formal sentence. HER CONDEMNATION. 257 The judge solemnly rose, cleared his throat with an unctuous noise and upturned eyes, and thus delivered it : — " Margaret Clitheroe. Having refused to put yourself to the country, this must be your sentence : Vou must return from whence you came, and there, in the lowest part of the prison, be stripped naked, laid down with your back upon the floor, and as much weight laid upon ycu as you are able to bear, and so to continue three days without meat or drink, except a little barley bread and puddle water ; and the third day, your hands and feet being tied to posts and a sharp stone being put under your back, you are to be pressed to death." She heard the awful words without fear or shrinking, merely remarking, with humility and modesty, in reply, " If this judg- ment be according to your conscience, I pray God, when your own time comes, to give you a better judgment before Him. P'or this right heartily do I thank the Most High ! " She was then pinioned by the sheriff's men, and led back to ])rison. There Sir Thomas Fairfax and others earnestly implored her to save herself and family by going even to one sermon at church. Some of the York ministers repeated this request, but in vain. One, Pease, asked, " AVhy refuse you to come to ' Our Church,' we having so plain and sure testimonies to show on our side for the truth ? " " I believe in that One Church, not made by man, which hath Seven Sacraments and One unalterable Faith. In that I will to live and die." Wiggington, the already mentioned minister, informed her that he had had a vision of the Person of Our Lord, who had assured him of his own election and salvation ; and therefore he trusted she would regard him as a faithful minister. Mr. Toby Matthew, Dean of Durham, and the Lord Mayor of York (who had married her mother), likewise tried to make an impression upon her ; but it was of no avail. She declined to give up the faith. It was decreed that she should suffer on Ladyda)', and at the York Tolbooth. She looked forward to her end without fear, and in full confidence of God's sustaining power to enable her to endure. She passed the last night of her life in prayer; and had fasted all the previous day. The i)rison-keeper's wife, though no Catholic, in charity promised to induce the executioners to hasten her death as soon as possible; but the sufferer replied, ''No, good Mrs. Yoward ; not so. God defend that I should procure any to be guilty of my death and blood." Ladyday dawned brightly. The golden sunshine had early R 258 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. lit the fretted towers of the Minster, and gilded the many spires of the parish churches ; all around the city it fell on the bright green meadows watered by the Ouse. The clouds above were light, the air was clear, the sky blue. Nature seemed to speak eloquently of man's resurrection from temporal death ; while the blessed feast-day itself told of God's grace and mercy, and of Mary's co-operation and obedience. The two sheriffs of the city, one of whom, Gibson, was horri- fied at this legal atrocity, brought the condemned one to the place of execution before eight o'clock. She went cheerfully, walking bare-footed, and distributing her alms. Coming to the appointed place, quite calmly, she knelt down and prayed. Some ministers near, tormenting her for the last time with exhortations and vain words, asked her to join with them in prayer. " I will not pray with you, nor shall you pray with me," she replied. " I will neither say ' Amen ' to your prayers, nor shall you to mine." She then interceded openly for the Holy Father, for the cardinals, for all true bishops and priests, and for all Christian princes, more especially for Queen Elizabeth, that God would turn her to the Catholic faith, and that so, after this mortal life, she might enjoy the peace of Heaven. Fawcelt, the other sheriff, said, "Mistress Clitheroe, remember that you die for treason." " No, no, Mr. Sheriff," she answered ; " deceive not yourself, I pray you. I die for the love of my Lord and Saviour and for the Ancient Faith." " Put off your apparel, then, now," he continued ; for you must die naked, as judgment was pronounced." On her knees, and in piteous accents, with tears, she and other women earnestly asked that she might retain her linen under- garment. But this was rudely denied her. Then she further implored that, for the honour of womanhood, only women might undress her ; and that the spectators would then avert their gaze. Eight beggars, four men and four women, had been hired to do the murder, and stood by ready for the w^ork. Fler clothes were removed, and thereupon the women drew over her body a habit of linen. She was then laid at length on the ground, with a kerchief over her face. A large, sharp flint stone, of many angular points, was placed under her back. Her ankles were tied together, and her wrists affixed by cords to two posts. A stout oak door, supported at the edges by these and other posts, was then placed upon her body. Heavy stones were then placed thereon. She continued to pray audibly, "O Jesu, good Jesu, OTHER SUFFERERS FOR RELIGION. 259 good Jesu, have mercy upon me," as the hired and heartless ruffians rudely heaped stone after stone upon the door. The rough fall and increased weight of every addition produced unknown agony. But she is said to have struggled not, and only prayed more earnestly. The few spectators sickened at the sight, as during a full quarter of an hour the stones were being piled on to the amount of nine hundredweight ; while the poor sufferer's agonising prayers to her Master grew fainter and feebler, for her frame quivered and her swollen tongue was dry. To some the minutes seemed hours. At length, after the crash of a weightier stone than any, no more prayers were heard ; the suppressed sob of suffering and the awful and prolonged sigh of extremest agony, found relief and rest in death. Thus of one more obstinate adherent of the old religion England was rid. Should any reader conceive this to be an exceptional case of punishment even unto death, inflicted on a woman during Queen Elizabeth's reign, it becomes a duty to point out that such an idea is a complete misconception. Women as well as men were constantly treated with the severest cruelty. Record after record occurs of their imprisonment and torture. Hundreds died in the northern gaols, after years of sufferina;, worn out with punish- ment and misery. Mistress Margaret Ward, a lady of Cheshire, and Mistress Ann Line, a widowed gentlewoman, both suffered death at Tybourne ; the first in 1588, for aiding a poor perse- cuted priest. Father Richard Watson, ^ to escape from Bridewell ; the second, on February 27th, 1601, for having harboured a priest, as was supposed; for the "offence" was not proved. The first-named was often whipped most infamouslj-, and tortured acutely. For eight succeeding days she was hung up by the hands to a beam, her feet scarce touching the ground ; a sharp punishment, which sometimes caused her to swoon. She was then taken down, carefully tended until she revived and recovered, then scourged anew, and hung up in the same way once again. She was offered her liberty if she would go to church, but declined. When her aid to the poor priest was thrown in her teeth as an act of disrespect to the queen, she replied that if Her Majesty had the ordinary feelings of a woman, and had known how ^ Of Father Watson, it is on record, " the authorities" thrust him into a dungeon so low and so strait, that he could neither stand up in it, nor lay himself dovyn at his full length to sleep. Here they loaded him with irons, and kept him for a whole month on bread and water ; of which they allowed him so small a pittance that it was scarce enough to keep him alive ; not suffering anyone to come near him to comfort him or speak to him. — Memoirs of Missionary Priests, vol. i. p. 234. Derby edition. 26o THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. Father AVatson was suffering, she herself would surely have aided him to have escaped. When Mrs. Line was ready to die she embraced the rope as well as she was able, being old, weak, and ill, exclaiming, " I am about to suffer for having harboured a jn-iest. So far from repenting for having done so, I rejoice ; and would, with all my heart, that instead of having harboured one I had entertained a thousand." Two priests, Mark Bark- worth and Roger Filcock, suffered death at the same time. About the period that Campion and Parsons arrived in England, it is said by some that Philip II. of Spain, who was also Sovereign of the Low Countries, in concert with the Guises of France, had begun to make military and naval preparations for the conquest of England. At all events they were com- menced soon afterwards. It must be frankly admitted that Elizabeth had given him great provocation for going to war. She had artfully fomented rebellion against him, and by the aid of spies, secret agents, and traitors, had done him all the mischief in her power. She had notoriously intercepted and seized his treasure, had provokingly engaged foreign mercenaries to fight against his troops, had allowed her mariners to plunder and massacre his defenceless subjects, as well as those of his American colonies. When he quietly and privately complained, shufHing and sophistry were the only replies vouchsafed. When, again, he expostulated with dignity through his ambassador, she and her ministers descended to the use of obvious and acknow- ledged falsehoods. Yet for her liberty and life she had been indebted to Philip inbyegone days. Throughout all the prepara- tions, however, Walsingham had been indefatigable in watching them step by step, and in checking King Philip indirectly on all occasions and at every point. When he sought pecuniary aid from the Venetians and Genoese, the great money-lenders of the age, Elizalieth's ministers, perfectly aware of the negotiations, succeeded both in damaging King Philip's credit, and in causing him some inconvenience. But, having secured new vessels, naval stores, and efficient seamen from Denmark and the Hanse towns, and by great general efforts both in Spain and the Low Countries obtained co-operation, he began to make his final plans. In 1587 it became evident from reliable information received, that the expedition would certainly sail in the spring of the following year. .Vccordingly every endeavour to meet the enemy was made by the queen's advisers, and a fleet was assembled of some size, consisting of about one hundred and forty vessels. These were furnished by the cities of London, Bristol, Harwich, THE GREAT ARMADA. 26 1 Sandwich, and other seaports ; by the merchant adventurers and by private individuals. To Charles, Lord Howard of Etifingham, who was of the old religion, was given the chief command. Under him were Raleigh, Hawkins, Drake, and Frobisher. Lord Henry Seymour, with a portion of the fleet, w^atched the coast of Flanders. Three armies were gathered together, each consisting of about twenty-five thousand men. One was discreetly distributed along the southern coast, specially near probable landing-places ; a second was placed near Tilbury Fort on the Thames, to protect the city of London, while it was arranged that a third should be in attendance on the person of the Sovereign. The queen, who stayed at Havering-at-Bower, St. Edward's ancient palace, absurdly arrayed in a breastplate, paid a short visit to this camp, where Lord Leicester,^ though a most incompetent general, commanded, and Her Majesty made an artificial and somewhat bombastic speech to the troops : — ■"■ I am come amongst you," she remarked, " not for my sport and recreation " (an indirect reply to those who said that, as usual, she had only followed her favourite), " but, as being resolved in the heat of the fight, to live and die amongst you all. I am ready, for my blood and my people, to lay mine honour in the dust. I know I have but the body of a feeble woman, but I possess the heart of a king, and of a King of England too." The people were enthusiastic in coming forward to defend their country. Those who adhered to the ancient faith were not less earnest and zealous than their neighbours. On this occasion, and indeed on all others, where patriotism was brought to the test, the Catholics proved that no degree of oppression and persecution could make them forget their duties as citizens or as subjects. Even Hume admits that Catholic gentlemen, though excluded from all offices of trust and authority, entered ^ "As for your person," wrote Leicester to her, " being the most dainty and sacred thing we have in this world to care for, I cannot, most dear queen, consent that you should expose it to danger. For upon your well- doing consists all the safety of your whole kingdom ; and, therefore, preserve that above all." — Hanhvicke Papers, vol. i. p. 577, She was allowed to come for a few days to see the forts and troops, and spend a short time with her favourite, who, however, distinctly forbad her remaining with the army or in the camp. \Yhen Lord Leicester visited Lord and Lady Shrewsbury at Chats- worth, the queen had the execrable taste to write thus of him, acknowledg- ing his hosts' attentions : — We should do him great wrong (holding him in that place of favour We do) in case We should not let you understand in how thankful sort IVi: accept the same at both your hands, not as done tin to him, but to Our Own self, 7-eputing him as another Ourself," etc. — Lodge, vol. ii. p. 155. 262 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. as volunteers in the queen's fleet and army. Some equipped ships at their own charge, and gave the command of them to Protestants ; others were active in animating their tenants, vassals, and neighbours, to the defence of their hearths and homes. Thus, at a sore crisis, when internal dissensions might have produced national ruin, and when an excellent opportunity had arisen to disorganise the plans of the Council and to make their cruel enemies and persecutors then lick the dust, the afflicted and sorely-tried Catholics were nobly patriotic and marvellously self-denying. Facts like this are of far greater moment and value than words. These facts cannot be gainsayed. On the side of the Spaniards there then lay near Lisbon a mighty fleet of nearly a hundred and forty vessels of war, with a corresponding number of transports — a grand and imposing sight. They had no less than twelve thousand seamen and galley-slaves, three thousand pieces of ordnance, and twenty-two thousand troops, officered by the noblest, the most refined, and the most gallant of Spain. In May, Philip visited the fleet, having received a blessed banner from Pope Sixtus V.^ and His Holiness's good wishes for success. Perex, Duke of Medina Sidonia was in command, aided by Don Martinez de Ricaldi, a mariner of great experience. I'he king had an account of what he termed " the most happy Armada," set forth and printed in Latin and other languages, while Cardinal Allen addressed " An Admo- nition to the nobility and people of England and Ireland," in Latin, urging them to aid the Spaniards and denouncing the eicester ^ whom she took up 1 " We are told that among the females, married or unmarried, who 264 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. first to serve her filthy lust ; whereof to have more freedom and interest, he caused his own wife to be murdered, as afterwards, for the accomplishment of his like brutish pleasures with another noble dame, it is openly known he made away with her husband. This man over-ruleth the Chamber, Court, Council, Parliament, ports, forts, seas, ships, tenders, men, munition, and all the country. "AVith the aforesaid person, and with divers others, she hath abused her bodie against God's lawes, to the disgrace of princely majestic and the whole nation's reproache, by unspeakable and incredible variety of lust, which modesty suffereth not to be remembered ; neyther were it to chaste eares to be uttered how shamefully she hath defiled and infamed her person and country, and made her court as a trappe, by this damnable and detestable art to entangle in sinne, and overthrowe the younger sorte of the nobilitye and gentlemen of the lande ; whereby she is become notorious to the Worlde, and in other countryes a common fable for this her turpitude, which in so highe degre, namely in a woman and a queene, deserveth not onlie deposition, but all vengeance, both of God and man ; and cannot be toUerated without eternal infamie of our whole countrie, the whole worlde diriding our effeminate dastardie, that have suffered such a creature almost thirty years together to raigne both over our bodies and soules, and to have the chief regiment of all our affaires, as well spirituall as temporal, to the extinguish inge not onley of religion but of all chaste livinge and honesty. " She does not marry, because she cannot confine herself to one man ; and to the condemnation of chaste and lawful marriage, she forced the very Parliament to give consent to a law that none should be named for her successor, savinge the natural, that is to saie bastard-borne, child of her own bodie." (Here is an allusion "to her unlawfull, longe concealed, or fained issue.") " She confederates with rebels of all nations, and is known to be the first and principal fountain of all those furious rebellions in Scotland, France, and I'landers ; sending abroad by her formed the Court of Elizabeth, two only escaped his solicitations ; that his first wife was munlered by his order ; that he disowned his marriage with the second, for the Scd-;e of a more favoured mistress ; and that to obtain that mistress he first triumphed over her virtue, and then administered poison to lier husband. To these instances lias been added a long catalogue of crimes, of treachery to his friends, of assassination of his enemies, and of acts of injustice and extortion towards those who had oflended his priile or refused to bend to his pleasure." — History of Eti^land, by J. Lingard, I),D., vol. vi. p. 253. Dublin, 1874. FAILURE OF THE ARMADA. 265 ministers, as is proved by intercepted letters and confessions, numbers of intelligencers, spies, and practisers, in most princes' courts, not only to give notice of news, but to deal with the dis- contented ; and hath sought to destroy the persons of the Pope's Holiness and the King of Spain. " She is excessively proud, obstinate, and impenitent, though she has been excommunicated eighteen years. " She hath murdered bishops and priests, and the Queen of Scots." The point and pith of this terrible series of charges is then set forth. Having noticed several examples of the depositions of kings under the elder dispensation, and of emperors by the Patriarch of Christendom, it proceeds to point out that the sentence of Pope Pius V. has not been pursued, for two reasons : firsdy, because of His Holiness's death, and, secondly, because of Elizabeth's great power and influence. But her determined perseverance in wickedness, her frightful persecution of those of the old religion, and her constant incitation to continental rebels to revolt, have induced Pope Sixtus to urge upon Philip of Spain the work now undertaken. How all this failed of its purpose ; how the Armada, thought to be invincible, was speedily scattered ; how the elements fought against the Spaniards; and how their admiral frankly admitted the loss of thirty ships of the largest class, and no less than ten thousand i:nen, is perfectly well known. Philip was thus defeated, the foreign Catholics were sorely disappointed. Many English people were frantic with joy. The queen triumphed. To revert once again to the innovators, their doings, and the consequences thereof. In certain places where the gospellers had secured popularity for their new doctrines — popular, of course, with the fanatical and gloomy of a certain type, as well as with the speculative and logical, who followed Calvin,^— many of the old rules, and most of the existing directions concerning divine service, put forth in rubrics, injunctions, and visitation articles, were utterly ignored. Some of the ministers, like Dee and Cardan (in a later reign), practised witchcraft and invoked demons.- The amount of 1 Dean R. W. Church, of St. Paul's Cathedral, with an evident dash of quiet irony, writes of "the imposing greatness of Calvin's theological posi- tion." — Iniroduciion to Hcwker. Oxford, 1868. - "Whether there be any man or woman in your parish that useth witch- craft, sorcery, charms, or unlawful prayer, or invocations in Latin or English, or upon any Christian body, or beast, or any that resorteth to the same for counsell or help, and what be their names." — Sandys' A'isitation Articles, 1578. 266 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. liberty in fact taken on all sides was considerable, but with some licence had no bounds ; for the restless spirit of reform seemed to have taken possession of so many. They simply did as, and what, they willed. Thus change followed change, because the followers of these daring innovators were ever seek- ing after some new thing. In many dioceses the ''non-sacrament ministers" seemed likely to become a majority. Increasing in boldness, some of them, I)assing over the bishops, set up Presbyteries,^ and held so-called " courts " or assemblies of their own, for judging their adherents. In these, all signs and sacraments were condemned. And, as legal presentments for schism or neglect were calmly ignored by such innovators, while some of the bishops confessed themselves altogether unable to suggest any remedy,- disorder continued to increase. Only on Sundays in certain parishes were any services ordin- arily held. From Monday mornings until Saturday nights, more especially in villages, the churches were too often locked up and left desolate. In certain towns, however, where the "prophesy- ings " were popular, such devotional exhibitions or exercises afforded considerable interest to many. They steadily developed in a Puritan direction, and became more extravagant year by year. These " prophesyings " commonly began with a long prayer from the presiding minister, who occupied the pulpit; during which the men, standing, bent forward and covered their faces with the sleeves of their gowns. The women-folk squatted and sighed.^ A mystical text selected from the Apocalypse always ensured an exciting sitting, for those who thought themselves ^ ' Whether any new presbiteries or eldershippe be lately among you erected, and by them any niinis-ters appointed iL'itlioiit orders taken of the bishops, do baptize, minister the Communion, or deale in any function ecclesiasticall ? " robably contrasted that, their homely and simple rite, — in which the body was refreshed, the mind deluded, and the conscience drugged, — with the now absolutely-abolished and truly- hated mass. It 7vas a contrast indeed. In other particulars, some reaction took place. The first person amongst the English ministers, who, by the general soundness of his principles, the clearness of his thoughts, and the ability with which he set them forth, began to stem the tide of this kind of confusion, innovation, and novelty (in his day so great, that all order and law seemed likely to be overturned, and distinct. Atheism first became rampant in a once Catholic country-) was Richard Hooker, born of a respectable family near the city of Exeter, on Our Lady's Day 1554. "When about twenty years of age, by the aid of an uncle who was chamber- lain of that city, he was admitted a clerk of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, of which in 1577 he became a Fellow, and subsequently Rector of Drayton Beauchamp in Buckingham- shire ; but was in 1584 appointed Master of the Temple in London, a position of prominence and importance. Here he was brought into controversy with the two notorious Puritans, Travers and Cartwright (of whom mention has already been made), who were deliberately aiming to effect still further and still greater fundamental changes both in the doctrine and discipline of the Church of England. but a porringer (that is, a domestic cup), with two handles for porridge, is in use at the Holy Communion. The same is the case likewise at Frinsted and Pestling in that county. — //>/(/. vol. xvii. pp. 291-2. London, 1SS7. 1 ' The state of the churches was deplorable ; they had been left to fana- tical neglect and ruin. The Sacrament was administered in the most irre- verent manner ; the sci-nce for the altar [Qy. the cup and platter] ivas borrowed from the nearest house, and the communicants took their seats at tallies which the Catholics termed ^'oyster-boards.'' The estates of the Church were alienated by the bishops. The highest dignitaries had availed them- selves of the spoliation of the churches, and shared the plate and costly carvings with the nobility and gentry. Many parishes were left without a clergyman ; in almost all, the service was neglected." — Documents from Simancas, Introduction, pp. 17, 18. London, 1S65. - "To heighten all these discontents and dangers, there was also sprung up a generation of godless men ; men that had so long given way to their own lusts and delusions, and so highly opposed the blessed motions of His Spirit, and the inward light of their own consciences, that they became the very slaves of vice, and had thereby sinned themselves into a belief of that which they would, but could not, believe : into a belief which is repugnant even Ui human nature (for the heathens believe that there are many gods), but these had sinned themsehk-s into a belief that there -,i'as no God."— Life of Mr. Richard Hooker^ by Isaac Walton, ed. Keble, p. 37. Oxford, 1845. RICHARD HOOKER. 269 Though Hooker had been brought up in the narrow school of Calvin, yet, when the new religion became duly developed in its various and contradictory forms, when moreover he saw to what lengths Travers and his adherents proposed to go, — what blank infidelity had ensued from such conflicts and controversies,-^he himself stopped short ; surveyed the actual situation with the ])ower and grasp of a clear-sighted and vigorous mind, and gave to the Christian nations a treatise so deep, so exact, and so masterly, that his name remains as one of the greatest and deepest writers of his day. One of the Chief Bishops of Chris- tendom highly commended his labours.^ The Laws of Ecclesi- astical Polity was commenced in the Temple about 1587, continued at Boscombe in the diocese of Sarum four years afterwards, and completed about 1594 at Bishopsbourne near Canterbury. The eminent writer, who was as modest and humble as he was thoughtful and learned, was of short stature, bent with literary labours and bodily mortifications, much tried by home troubles, and in no way externally remarkable. But the services he rendered to the institution of which he was so great a light and defender, the masterly method by which he led his readers back from the new to the old, will only be adequately realised when the miserable disunion of the sixteenth century, which he so deplored, is atoned for by the corporate reunion of a later age. Hooker laid the foundation of a theological party in the National Church, whose principles were rather akin to those of Christian divines before the so-called "Reformation," than to those of Barlow, Cranmer, Sandys, Parkhurst, and Bale. From Hooker's day to the present, his principles have been always more or less acknowledged as good and true ; so that a consider- able section of English Churchmen has been benefited and blessed through his labours. Nevertheless, as regards the crucial question of ordination, — a question of life or death to the professing Catholic, though one of little or no moment to the newly-bred sectarian or Donatistic Nationalist,- — Hooker's trumpet gave a most uncertain and ^ Pope Clement VIH. [Hippolytus Aldobrandini] said of Hooker, "There is no learning that this man hath not searcht into ; nothing too hard for his imderstanding ; this man indeed deserves the name of an author ; his books will get reverence by age, for there is in them such seeds of eternity, that, if the rest be Hke this, they shall last till the last fire shall consume all learn- ing." — Life of Hooker, Iveble's ed. of his Works, p. 71. Oxford, 1845. - In quoting the following account of Hooker's position, the author must regretfully and frankly confess his inability to reconcile such distressing facts as many of those which are recorded in these volumes, with the late respected 270 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. unsatisfactory sound. As regards current events, he saw around him bishops who one and all did not believe that episcopal ordination was essential, and who possibly had never themselves received it ; deans and prebendaries, like Whittingham and Kinge, Ahvood and De Saravia, who had received only so-called "ordination "at the hands of presbyters ; and numerous churches, as existing evidence proves, served by ministers not ordained at all.^ In making his able defence of true principles, therefore, he Mr. Keble's confident assertions regarding the then state of affairs. That thoughtful and eminent Tractarian in 1845 thus wrote: — "Now, since the episcopal succession had been so carefully retained in the Church of England, and so much anxiety evinced to render both her Liturgy and Ordination Services strictly conformable to the rules and doctrines of antiquity, it miyht have been expected that the defenders of the English hierarchy against the first Puritans should take the highest ground, and challenge for the bishops the same unreserved submission, on the same plea of exclusive apostolical prerogative, which their adversaries feared not to insist on for their elders and deacons. It is notorious, however, that such was rot in general the line pre- ferred by Jewell, Whitgift, Bishop Cooper, and others, to whom the manage- ment of that controversy was intrusted during the early part of Elizabeth's reign. They do not expressly disavow, but they carefully shun, that unre- served appeal to Christian antiquity, in which one would have thought they must have discerned the very strength of their cause to lie. It is enough with them to show that the government by archbishops and bishops is ancient and allowable ; they never venture to urge its exclusive claim, or to connect the succession with the validity of the holy Sacraments ; and yet it is obvious that such a course of argument alone (supposing it borne out by facts) could fully meet all the exigencies of the case. It must have occurred to the learned writers above mentioned, since it was the received doctrine of the Church down to their days ; and if they had disapproved it, as some theologians of no small renown have since done, it seems unlikely that they should have passed it over without some express avowal of dissent ; considering that they always wrote with an eye to the pretensions of Rome also, which popular opinion had in a great degree mixed up with this doctrine of apostolical succession. One obvious reason, and probably the chief one, of their silence, was the relation in which they stood to the foreign Protestant congregations. The question had been mixed up with considerations of personal friendship, first by Cranmer's connection with the Lutherans, and after King Edward's death, by the residence of Jewell, Grindal, and others at Zurich, Strasburg, and elsewhere, in congregations which had given up the apostolical succession. Thus feelings arose which came, insensibly, no doubt, but really and strongly, in aid of the prevailing notion that everything was to be sacrificed to the paramount object of union among Protestants." — Rev. J. Keble's Preface to the Works of Kichard Hooker, pp. lix. Ix. Oxford, 1S45. 1 "Nearly up to the time when he [Richard Hooker] wrote, numbers had been admitted to the ministry of the Church of England, witli no better than Presbyterian ordination, and it appears by Travers's Supplication to the Council, that such was the construction put upon the statute of the 13th of Elizabeth, permitting those who had received orders in any other form than that of the P'.nglish service-book, on giving certain securities, to exercise their calling in England. If it were really the intention of [the framersand makers of] that act to authorise other than episcopal ordination, it is but one proof CONCERNING IIOOKER'S SCHOOL OF THOUGHT. 2/1 was bound to consider such grave facts, which he, a mere country pastor, had neither power nor opportunity to alter. Nothing that he could think, write, or say, could undo the mischief already deliberately done. Hooker, consequently, adapted himself to circumstances, there was obviously no other alternative ; and though, if his admitted principles were faith- fully applied, the fact that episcopal ordination was essential might be reasonably deduced from their acceptance, he not only nowhere so applied them, but actually regarded Ur. Adrian De Saravia ^ — ordained abroad by presbyters, if at all — as one perfectly capable of receiving his death-bed confession, of giving him absolution, and of administering the Lord's Supper. Here is the record : — " About one day before his death, Dr. Saravia, who knew the very secrets of his soul (for they were supposed to be confessors to each other), came to him, and after a conference of the benefit, the necessity, and safety of the Church's absolution, it was resolved the doctor should give him both that and the Sacrament the day following. To which end the doctor came, and after a short retirement and privacy, they two returned to the company, and then the doctor gave him, and some of those friends which were with him, the blessed Sacrament of the body and blood of our Jesus. Which being performed, the doctor thought he saw a reverend gaiety in his face."'- Subsequently, the " Reformed " National Church — which, however, had happily retained a belief in the fundamental doctrines of Christianity, and in two of the Sacraments — began to throw off the heresies and errors of its first founders, and in due "course abandoned some of them. For the influence of Hooker has never been lost. The rise of the Caroline school of theologians, often thoroughly Christian, if not quite Catholic ; the improvement deliberately made in the Ordinal in 1662, together with the expulsion of the fanatical and unordained ; the beneficial influence of Archbishop Sancroft and the later Non- more of the low accommodating notions concerning the Church which then prevailed ; and may serve to heighten our sense of the imminent risk which we were in of losing the succession." — P. Ixxvi. of the Preface by the Rev. John Keble to his edition of Hooker's Works. 1 Adrian de Saravia came from Ghent. His father was a Spaniard ; his mother from Artois. As is generally allowed, he was never ordained, though he wrote in defence of episcopacy, held a controversy with Beza, and was made a Prebendary of Canterbury. He wrote three remarkable tracts : (i) "De diversis ministrorum evangelii gradibus ; " (2) '-'De Honore prcesulibus et presbyteris debito ;" and (3) " De sacrilegis et sacrilegorum pcenis." - Life of Mr. Richard Hooker, p. 85. Keble's edition of his Works. Oxford, 1845. 2-2 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. jurors ; and, more especially, the great work of reparation and restoration effected because of the Oxford movement of 1833, are all tokens that the Almighty has not forsaken us, but has yet some important work for the Church of England to do, — ^whether in a day of sunshine and grace, or after a period of storm and losses, none can know, — when the time for effecting corporate reunion, on the solid basis of authority and truth, shall in His merciful providence have at length arrived. Correspondence concerning the Proposed Private Assassination of Marv, Queen of Scots. From the '■'• Letter-Books of Sir Amias Fou/et,'^ Keeper of the Queen. " To Sir Amias Poulet.' " ' After our hearty commendations, we find by speech lately uttered by Her Majesty that she doih note in you a lack of that care and zeal of her service that she looketh for at your hands, in that you have not in all this time of yourselves (without other ])rovocation) found out some way to shorten the life of that ([ueen, considering the great peril she is subject unto hourly, so long as the said queen shall live. \Vherein, besides a kind of lack of love towards her, she noteth greatly that you have not that care of your own particular safeties, or rather of the pre- servation of religion and the public good and prosperity of your country, that reason and policy commandeth, especially having so good a warrant and ground for the satisfaction of your con- sciences towards God and the discharge of your credit and reputation towards the w'orld, as the oath of association which you both have so solemnly taken and vowed, and especially the matter wherewith she standeth charged being so clearly and manifestly proved against her. And therefore she taketh it most unkindly towards her, that men professing that love towards her that you do, should in any kind of sort, for lack of the dis- charge of your duties, cast the burthen upon her, knowing as you do her indisposition to shed blood, especially of one of that sex and quality, and so near to her in blood as the said (jueen is. These respects we find do greatly trouble Her Majesty, who, we assure you, has sundry times protested that if ' Hearne's M.S. Diary, vol. Ixxxv. p. 89. From Gwyn^^ Transcript. VARIOUS HISTORICAL LETTERS. 273 the regard of the danger of her good subjects and faithful servants did not more move her than her own peril, she would never be drawn to assent to the shedding of her blood. We thought it very meet to acquaint (you) with these speeches lately passed from Her Majesty, referring the same to your good judgments. And so we commit you to the protection of the Almighty. "'At London, February i, 1586. " ' Your most assured friends, " ' Francis Walsingham, " ' Wm. Davison.' " This letter was received at Fotheringhay, the 2nd of February at five in the afternoon." " An abstract of a letter from Mr. Secretary Davison, of the said ist of February 1586, as foUoweth : — " ' I pray let this and the inclosed be committed to the fire, which measure shall be likewise mete to your answer, after it hath been communicated to Her Majesty for her satisfaction.'" " ' A postscript in a letter from Mr. Secretary Davison, of the 3rd of February 1586 ; — " ' I entreated you in my last to burn my letters sent unto you for the argument' sake, which by your answer to Mr. Secretary (which I have seen) appeareth not to have been done. I pray you, let me entreat you to make heretics of the one and the other, as I mean to use yours, after Her Majesty hath seen it.' " " In the end of the postscript — " ' I pray you let me hear what you have done with my letters, because they are not fit to be kept, that I may satisfy Her Majesty therein, who might otherwise take offence thereat, and if you entreat this postscript in the same manner, you shall not err a whit.'" " A. Poulet— D. Drury. "A copy of a letter to Sir Francis Walsingham, of the 2nd of February 1586, at six in the afternoon, being the answer to a letter from him, the said Sir Francis, of the ist of February 1586, received at Fotheringhay, the 2nd day of Februar}-, at five in the afternoon : — "'Your letters of yesterday coming to my hands this present S 274 THE CHURCH UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH. day at five in the afternoon, I would not fail according to your directions to return my answers with all ])ossible speed, which {sic) shall deliver unto you with great grief and bitterness of mind, in that I am so unhappy to have liven to see this unhappy day in the which I am recjuired by direction from my most gracious sovereign to do an act which God and the law forhiddeth. My good livings and life are at Her Majesty's disposition, and am ready to so lose them this next morrow if it shall so please her, acknowledging that I hold them as of her mere and most gracious favour, and do not desire them to enjoy them, but with Her Highness's good liking. But God forbid that I should make so foul a shipwreck of my conscience, or leave so great a blot to my poor posterity, to shed blood without law or warrant. Trusting that Her Majesty, of her accustomed clemency, will take this my dutiful answer in good part (and the rather by your good mediation), as proceeding from one who will never be inferior to any Christian subject living in duty, honour, love, and obedience towards his sovereign. And thus I commit you to the mercy of the Almighty. "'From Fotheringhay, the 2nd of P'ebruary 1586. " ' Your most assured poor friends, " ' A, POULET, " ' D. Drury. " ' Your letters coming in the plural number seem to be meant as to Sir Drue Drury as to myself, and yet because he is not named in them, neither the letter directed unto him, he forbeareth to make any particular answer, but subscribeth in heart to my opinion.' " "I copied these letters in December 17 17, from a MS. folio book of letters to and from Sir Amias Poulet, when the Queen of Scots' Governor at Fotheringhay. This book is in the hands of John, Earl of Poulett, his immediate descendant, and in that book is likewise contained a particular account of the trial of the Queen of Scots, which seems to be done by Sir Amias himself.^ [Poulet was too cautious to destroy the disgraceful letters he had been dishonoured by receiving from the secretaries of his sovereign. He carried the originals with him to London, and there doubtless they were " made heretics of," as Davison had ^ \Viih this note by Mr. Gwyn, Hearnc's copy ends. VARIOUS HISTORICAL LETTERS. 275 urged. But mindful of his own reputation, he left copies with his family, that, if necessary, it might be known in what terms he had repelled the base proposal.] " Poulet to Davison. " ' Sir, — The rule of charity commandeth to bear with the impatience of the afflicted, which Christian lesson you have learned, as I find by experience to my great contentment, in that you have been content to bear with my malapertness, wherein you bind me more and more to love you and to honour you, which I will do with all human faithfulness. " ' If I should say that I have burned the papers you wot ot I cannot tell if everybody would believe me; and therefore I reserve them to be delivered to your hands at my coming to London. God bless you and prosper all your actions to His glory. "'From Fotheringhay, the Sth of February 15S6. " ' Your most assuredly to my small power, '"A. POUI.ET.'" The Letter- Books of Sir Aniias Poulet, Keeper of Mary, Queen of Scots. Edited by Rev. John Morris. London, 1874. A volume which, I may be permitted to add, is full of historical interest and importance. CHAPTER IX. Throughout all these stirring times, times of excitement, con- fusion, and change, the peculiar disorder which everywhere existed in the National Church can scarcely now be realised. Unless records actually remained in black, and white, of the exact state of the then existing degradation, which plainly set it forth in detail, few would be found to credit its existence. Writers interested in making out a case, by suppressing facts, passing over damaging records, and by artful special pleading, have for a long time succeeded in obscuring the truth. The bishops of that day are constantly complaining to the Council of their miseries, and are found metaphorically wringing their hands in despair of ever being able to bring order out of such disorder. Obedience, they assert, does not exist. Every one persists in doing exactly what he likes, and moral suasion is of little or no avail. Dr. Bickley, Bishop of Chichester, believes that the times are sad because " so many preaching ministers will abide no cor- rection."^ He himself had been openly set at defiance, to his great humiliation, by some " i)roper insolent " preachers who, going from place to place, would not minister any sacrament "but only stir up the ignorant and mean with vain and vicious words," despising his lordship, his office and authority, and "the powers that be." They were "verie sore skornfull " when the queen was referred to as owning any spiritual authority. Dr. Chaderton of Lichfield was very downhearted at the state of affairs, as he piteously wrote to the Lord Treasurer in the following terms ? — " Certes, my honorable lord, I am here in a very perilous country ; and, if I may speak it without offence, the very sink of the whole realm, both for corrupt religion and life.'^ ■" In 1583 it is on record that Tiiomas Underdowne preached in St. Michael's, Lewes, that anyone who had an inward persuasion and allowance that he v\as called by Cod might lawfully preach. — Slate Papers, Domestic, Elizabeth, vol. clix. Nos. 15, 16. ^ Sliyp