God’s Traitors: Terror & Faith in Elizabethan England (36 page)

BOOK: God’s Traitors: Terror & Faith in Elizabethan England
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‘The Friday night before Passion Sunday,’ Garnet informed Robert Persons in September 1594,

was such a hurly burly in London as never was seen in man’s memory, no, not when Wyatt was at the gates: a general search in all London, the Justices and chief citizens going in person, all unknown persons taken and put in churches till the next day.

To Aquaviva, who may not have heard of Thomas Wyatt’s 1554 rebellion against Queen Mary, Garnet suggested that ‘the uproar was such that Hannibal himself might have been at the gates or the Spanish fleet in the river Thames’.
34

The year had begun with the revelation of two assassination plots. The first involved the royal physician, Roderigo Lopez, a Portuguese Jew who had converted to Christianity. He had allegedly been paid by the King of Spain to poison Queen Elizabeth. Arguably the Spanish link made it a Catholic plot, but its disclosure at this time, indeed its very existence, had more to do with the political rivalry of the Earl of Essex and the Cecils. Keen to prove his security credentials, Essex announced his discovery of this ‘dangerous and desperate treason’ in January. Burghley, who had known about Lopez’s Spanish connections much earlier and even used him as a double agent, was compromised
and so had to lend his weight to Essex’s vigorous investigation.

The following month Burghley was quick to make his own discovery: another murder plot, this time involving several Irish soldiers from the renegade regiment of Sir William Stanley (the same unit of which Henry Walpole had been chaplain). As far as Garnet was concerned, this plot was ominous because an English Jesuit in exile, William Holt, was accused of recruiting the assassins. One of the Irishmen also claimed that Walpole had known about the plan and had advised him in Calais to cross the Channel in secret. Again, though, all was not quite as it seemed: the confessions of the assassins-designate – so swift, so voluntary, so many of them – kept changing. Two of the Irishmen had been known to Burghley for nearly two years. One he had not deemed a significant threat; the other was an informant and probable plant. Whatever this was, it was not a state of emergency.
35

It is an axiom of ‘spiery’ (as the Elizabethans called it) that if one presses hard enough for a certain kind of information, and pays sufficiently well, it might be received. Prejudices and political ambitions have no place in intelligence work,
fn7
but in the sixteenth century they sometimes intruded and the result was an occasional – and occasionally deliberate – blurring of perception and reality. Yet it must always be remembered that amidst the wild rants and inchoate posturing of angry young men, which was a fair constant for much of Elizabeth’s reign, there were indeed real plots to kill her and invade the realm. There were Catholics, and not just from Stanley’s regiment, who were prepared to kill as well as die for their faith, and as events elsewhere in Europe had shown, assassins were not bound to fail. The recent performance of Christopher Marlowe’s
The Massacre at Paris
at the Rose Playhouse in Southwark reminded Londoners of Catholic capability. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that the consequence of the revelations of early 1594 was a closer watch on the ports and a strike on suspicious targets,
the most suspicious being the recusant community in London and, within that community, the English superior of the Society of Jesus. It should not be forgotten either that one of the Queen’s most determined enemies, Robert Persons, S.J., was Garnet’s regular correspondent at this time, as well as the son of ‘the old woman’ who lived under the Vaux sisters’ roof.

On Friday, 15 March 1594, teams led by Justice Richard Young descended on all known recusant properties in and around the capital. They were quick to proclaim the night a success – a haul of Catholic materials and manuscripts were seized along with several laymen in a house in Golden Lane, Clerkenwell. Garnet had recently stayed at this ‘notorious den of priests’ and John Gerard had been on his way there that night until Garnet had ‘importunately stayed him’ at his suburban retreat four or five miles from London. The priests remained safe, but some of their ‘friends and chiefest instruments’, including Richard Fulwood, who ran Garnet’s smuggling operation, were taken. ‘Some of them have been tortured,’ Garnet wrote.
36

Gerard moved on to Braddocks, the home of William Wiseman in Essex, but before daybreak on Easter Monday he heard galloping hooves. His narrative of the raid, even translated from the original Latin, shows what a fine storyteller he was:

I was hardly tucked away when the pursuivants broke down the door and burst in. They fanned out through the house, making a great racket. The first thing they did was to shut up the mistress of the house in her own room with her daughters, then they locked up the Catholic servants in different places in the same part of the house. This done, they took possession of the place (it was a large house) and began to search everywhere, even lifting up the tiles of the roof to examine underneath them and using candles in the dark corners. When they found nothing, they started knocking down suspicious-looking places. They measured the walls with long rods and if the measurements did not tally, they pulled down the section that they could not account for. They tapped every wall and floor for hollow spots, and on sounding anything hollow they smashed it in.
37

Throughout the four-day search for him, Gerard hid in an Owen-built priest-hole beneath the chapel fireplace. He had a couple of biscuits
and the quince jam that Mrs Wiseman had thrust upon him at the last minute. On the final evening the officers lit a fire over the false hearth, sending a shower of hot embers into the hide, but Gerard remained silent and undiscovered. Three weeks later, having returned to London, he was captured with Nicholas Owen. This time, ‘there was no escape’.
38

The summer brought more grief for Garnet – a priest and three laymen executed in Dorchester; several youths bound for the Continent taken from their boats. ‘One danger followed close on the heels of the next,’ he reported,

so that from that time hardly a week passed without some great hazard or some exceptional loss. And along with these hardships were the watches kept on the ports, the continual opening of letters, the searching of private houses, so that we were scarcely permitted to breathe.
39

They were, at least, free. John Gerard, on the other hand, was taken to the Counter prison in the Poultry and placed in a cell next to the privy. The stench was ‘not slight’ and kept him awake at night. He was examined by Justice Young and Richard Topcliffe and put in irons. ‘When the prisoners below started singing lewd songs and Geneva psalms,’ he related, ‘I was able to drown their noise with the less unpleasant sound of my clanking chains.’ After about three months he was transferred to the Clink, where, for now, we leave him. ‘He will be stout,’ wrote Garnet, ‘I doubt not.’
40

fn1
Robert Persons, Joseph Creswell, Thomas Stapleton and Richard Verstegan all wrote ‘evil counsellor’ tracts in response to the proclamation. Persons’ rejoinder, popularly known as ‘Philopater’, was funded by Philip II and appeared in several editions in 1592–3. His argument that Catholics could use violence to remove a heretical ruler did his co-religionists in England no favours.

fn2
At the execution (for harbouring) of the recusant gentleman Swithin Wells on 10 December 1591, Topcliffe’s taunt that papists ‘follow the Pope and his Bulls; believe me, I think some bulls begot you all’, was parried by Wells with: ‘If we have bulls to our fathers, thou hast a cow to thy mother.’ Wells immediately apologised, but his unguarded swipe at the Queen might have been more representative of private recusant opinion than the formal protestations of loyalty would suggest. (Questier, ‘Elizabeth and the Catholics’, p. 73)

fn3
Perhaps there weren’t quite as many Catholic assassins out there as the government feared; or perhaps Topcliffe was, perversely, too good an asset, in terms of negative publicity, to lose.

fn4
Ben Jonson is said to have stated that had he written Southwell’s poem ‘The Burning Babe’, ‘he would have been content to destroy many’ of his own works. (
ODNB
)

fn5
Horatio Bussino, the Venetian ambassador’s chaplain in 1617–18, thought the city ‘better deserves to be called Lorda (filth) than Londra (London)’. (Razzell,
Two Travellers
, pp. 116, 177)

fn6
High lawyer
: a full-time highwayman.
Ruffler
: a beggar claiming to be a discharged soldier seeking employment.
Clapperdudgeon
: a beggar born.
Whipjack
: a beggar claiming to have suffered losses at sea by shipwreck or piracy.
Dummerer
: a real or pretended mute.
Counterfeit crank
: a vagrant pretending to be epileptic.
Prigger of prancers
: a horse thief, usually at fairs and markets. (Salgādo,
The Elizabethan Underworld
, pp. 122–30)

fn7
Under section 2(2)(b) of the Security Service Act 1989, the primary legislation which put MI5 on a statutory basis and acknowledged the agency’s continued existence, the Director General is required to ensure that ‘the Service does not take any action to further the interests of any political party’. A similar provision applies to MI6 by virtue of section 2(2)(b) of the Intelligence Services Act 1994, although such provision does not prevent MI6 from taking action to further the interests of political parties outside the UK, providing such action is in accordance with the UK national interest.

14

Hot Holy Ladies

If we are to believe John Wilson’s dedicatory epistle in
The Treasure of Vowed Chastity in Secular Persons
, Anne Vaux was honourable and virtuous and absorbed by ‘pious and devout exercises’. She embraced chastity with a ‘sincerity of heart and virtuous manner of life’ and was as close to perfection as was possible for a laywoman. Her ‘virtuous disposition’ was also lauded by Michael Walpole, S.J. (Henry Walpole’s brother), who dedicated his translation of the life of the Jesuit founder, Ignatius Loyola, to Anne, ‘before all others’, because she had ‘deserved so well of his children living in our afflicted country’.
1

Anne’s allegiance to the Jesuits also inspired criticism, even in priestly circles. In his
Quodlibets, or, Decacordon of Ten Quodlibeticall Questions Concerning Religion and State
(1602), a secular priest called William Watson launched a vicious attack on the women who ‘mightily dote and run riot after’ Jesuit priests. Such ‘hot holy ladies’, he argued, were seduced by their confessors and turned into ‘parrots, pies or jangling jays, to prattle up and down all that they hear and see’. Watson claimed that there was ‘a whole brown dozen’ of these ‘silly gentlewomen’ about London. Earlier in his tract he identified three of them:

Here a Lady
A
. (otherwise truly religious and honourable), there a Mistress
A.V
., a seeming saintly votary, and every where a whipping Mistress
H
. (whose tongue goeth like the clack of a mill), so very unwomanly, much more so uncatholic-like do taunt, gibe and despise the secular priests.
2

There was more to this than misogyny. ‘Mistress A.V.’ and her friends had involved themselves in the intra-clerical factionalism that threatened to implode the English mission. With no clear leadership
or defined structure, and one group of priests who favoured episcopacy having to work alongside another whose activities cut across parochial boundaries, there were bound to be rivalries and disputes. The Jesuits had arrived after the secular priests and immediately ruffled feathers. They were accused of being provocative, publicity-seeking and aggressively uncompromising. Their refusal to allow any kind of conformity to the established Church (reinforced by Garnet’s
An Apology Against the Defence of Schism
and
A Treatise of Christian Renunciation
, both of 1593) was subversive and counter-productive. Their initiatives were flashy, theatrical and morally questionable. They poached all the plum chaplaincies, diverted communal funds into their coffers and, in seeking to appropriate traditional devotions like the rosary, sought to dominate every aspect of the mission. They were proud, patronising and rather too comfortable in their gentleman’s disguises. They meddled in politics and knew Machiavelli’s works better than their breviaries. Their founder was a militant Spaniard and their ‘chief firebrand’, Robert Persons, pushed for a Spanish invasion and favoured a Habsburg over a Stuart succession. ‘In their hearts and practices’ they were ‘altogether Spanish’.
3
They were traitors to their country.

The Jesuits hurled many of the same calumnies at their secular critics.
fn1
By condoning occasional conformity and seeking compromise with the government (which sensibly took full advantage of the dispute), they had become politicised. They lived lushly and lazily, languishing in their livings and not doing enough to reconcile the wider community. They were cowardly, cynical and small-minded. Jealous of Jesuit successes, they made the Society the scapegoat of all the Catholics’ ills. They lacked proselytising zeal and all too often apostatised. They pandered to heretics and were morally turpid. They were traitors to their faith.

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