As suggested in Chapter 2, Shakespeare rewrote the proto-Protestant martyr John Oldcastle in the person of Falstaff in his Henry IV plays as an apologist of dissimulation, in the spheres of both religion and the theatre. However, this reinterpretation of the Lollard dissenter, who had originally given Falstaff his name, did not remain uncontested. The First Part of Sir John Oldcastle (1599), written by Anthony Munday, Michael Drayton, Robert Wilson, and Richard Hathaway, presented itself as a deliberate repudiation of Shakespeare’s take on Oldcastle/Falstaff.Footnote 1 As I argue in this chapter, Olcastle makes a subtle case for nonconformity and can be read as a protest against the silencing of Puritan dissent in the 1590s, which stands in marked contrast to the religio-political quietism displayed in the Henry IV plays. Already in the prologue, the authors of Oldcastle set the record straight:
While Shakespeare’s plot in the Henry IV plays is substantially indebted to The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth (published in 1598) and follows its dramatic predecessor in largely passing over Olcastle’s religious dissent and subsequent martyrdom, Oldcastle follows the historical record, especially John Foxe’s Actes and Monuments, more closely.
The play (partly) adopts Foxe’s narrative that clears Oldcastle from the charge of treason and presents the prospective martyr as a worthy precursor of the English Reformation. Throughout the play, however, Oldcastle is subject to slander by corrupt ecclesiastical detractors, especially the Bishop of Rochester and the comically villainous priest Sir John of Wrotham, who accuse him not only of heresy but also of treason. Against his will, Oldcastle’s name becomes a rallying cry for all kinds of malcontents, who eventually march against the King in what came to be known as the Ficket Field rebellion. Even Henry V, who is otherwise reluctant to blame Oldcastle personally for any civic unrest related to the Lollard cause, begins to doubt Oldcastle’s loyalty. However, the latter succeeds in reasserting his credentials as a loyal subject when he reveals the Southampton Plot (dramatised by Shakespeare in Henry V, but without Oldcastle) to the King. As Henry departs for France, Rochester continues his campaign against Oldcastle, who is eventually imprisoned in the Tower but escapes with the help of his loyal servant Harpool and is reunited with his wife. For the remainder of The First Part of Sir John Oldcastle, the couple are on the run, facing new difficulties such as being falsely accused of murder, but in the end they manage to flee to Wales. Oldcastle’s martyrdom would evidently have been reserved for the non-extant sequel.
In this version of the Oldcastle narrative, Munday and his collaborators roll back almost all of Shakespeare’s innovations. Falstaff’s ‘good fellowship’ is derided as nothing but the deluded self-conception of a shabby band of thieves. Shakespeare’s celebration of dissimulation as a life-giving principle is replaced with conventional anti-theatrical stereotypes and denunciations of Catholic hypocrisy. Unlike Falstaff, Oldcastle is a Protestant hero willing to undergo martyrdom, but nonetheless not a traitor. In the top-down perspective on toleration in Shakespeare’s Henry IV plays, toleration for private dissent and the stress on political obedience go hand in hand. In turn, Oldcastle addresses the subject of religious dissent from what might be called an oppositional perspective. While Shakespeare denounces religious justifications of political resistance as a hypocritical instrumentalisation of religion, Oldcastle dramatises the case of religious dissenters who think of themselves as loyal subjects but find themselves accused of treasonous intentions because of their religious beliefs.
There are several political, religious, and literary contexts in which Oldcastle might plausibly be located. The play’s explicit repudiation of Shakespeare’s lampooning of the proto-Protestant martyr may have been related to the rivalry between the Chamberlain’s Men and the Admiral’s Men, as well as the different court factions to which their respective patrons adhered. The Admiral’s Men’s patron, Charles Howard, was allied to the Elizabethan Lord Cobham, William Brooke, and his son Henry, who possibly took offence at Shakespeare’s take on their venerable ancestor.Footnote 2 Donna Hamilton has further suggested that the publication of Oldcastle and the Earl of Huntingdon plays may be related to the controversy which the Puritan exorcist John Darrell stirred up around the turn of the century. The plays may thus have met a renewed demand to assert the credentials of a moderate and loyalist Puritan party.Footnote 3 This ideological stance may also have been related to commercial considerations. Michael O’Connell has suggested that ‘what the Henslowe companies appear to have had in mind was the conciliation of moderate Puritan elements among the London citizens and an attempt to entice into the theaters those groups that had previously shunned it’.Footnote 4
As an appeal to a devout Protestant or even Puritan audience, Oldcastle did not stand alone. In terms of genre, Oldcastle belongs to a brief vogue of hagiographical plays remembering the heroes and martyrs of the English Reformation, which were staged primarily by the Admiral’s Men and Worcester’s Men from 1599 to c. 1605. Plays such as Oldcastle, Thomas Lord Cromwell, and Sir Thomas Wyatt have been classified as ‘elect nation plays’, but usually come with a strong biographical bent and a focus on individual choice, moral dilemma, and conscience, which would likely have resonated with those who found themselves estranged from the Established Church.Footnote 5 At any rate, with its generic affiliation to the elect nation play and by adapting a prominent character from the repertoire of the Chamberlain’s Men, Oldcastle fits squarely into the Admiral’s Men’s commercial strategies of ‘cluster marketing and character spin-offs’.Footnote 6 That is to say, there are overlapping commercial, ideological, as well as political considerations that might help to account for the remarkably Puritan slant of the play.
Conscience and Loyalty
While the rebels in 2 Henry IV freely admit that they are using religion as a propaganda tool, Oldcastle repeatedly stresses the need to differentiate between religious dissent and treason. In the 1590s, the nexus of heresy and treason concerned Catholics as well as Puritans, who clashed more violently with political and ecclesiastical authority than they had ever done before. The two separatists Henry Barrow and John Greenwood were hanged on 6 April 1593, and John Penry, a possible co-author of the Marprelate tracts, shared their fate six weeks later. The most spectacular case, however, was the self-proclaimed prophet William Hacket, who declared on 12 July 1591 in Cheapside that the Queen had forfeited her right to the Crown because of her suppression of true religion.Footnote 7 Hacket was a major embarrassment for the Puritan cause, but provided conformist polemicists with exactly what they had been looking for: a link between Presbyterianism and open rebellion. Anti-Puritan legislation followed suit. In 1593, Parliament passed the notorious Act against Seditious Sectaries,Footnote 8 ‘the first and only act of an Elizabethan parliament which dealt exclusively and severely, with protestant sectaries’.Footnote 9 In subsequent popular polemics and satire, Puritanism became synonymous with sedition. In Thomas Nashe’s Unfortunate Traveller (1594), for instance, the infamous Anabaptist uprising in Munster in 1534–5 serves as a blueprint for Puritan sedition: ‘What was the foundation or ground-worke of this dismall declining of Munster, but the banishing of their Bishop? … Heare what it is to be Anabaptists, to be Puritans, to be villaines; you may bee counted illuminate botchers for a while, but your end will bee, Good people, pray for vs’.Footnote 10 The rejection of the episcopacy, Nashe intimates, was only the tip of the iceberg of Puritan sedition.
As a means to assert their credentials as good subjects to the English monarch, Catholics were also happy to put the boot in. In A treatise of three conuersions (1604), Robert Parsons calls Oldcastle ‘a fanaticall Anabaptist’ and describes him as a model for rebellious Puritans like Hacket: ‘Hackett said, he should rise againe the third day, as Oldcastle did: and went as deuoutly to the gallowes, as the other did … and at the gallowes railed no lesse bitterly vpon Queene Elizabeth, then Oldcastle did vpon that woorthie King Henry the fift [sic]’.Footnote 11 Such attempts to discredit the Puritan movement as seditious in toto by drawing a line from Oldcastle to the most radical Puritans of the 1590s are also registered in Oldcastle. In the play, Catholic villains such as the Bishop of Rochester ventriloquise the same allegations of sedition against the Lollards as were levelled against the Puritans in the 1590s:
The threat of popular revolt, their addiction to ‘innovation’, and their ‘frenzy’ are all reminiscent of the anti-Puritan stereotypes of the 1590s. However, it is this assumption of the inherent seditiousness of Puritanism that Oldcastle purports to challenge and unmask as a polemical fiction.
From the beginning, the play is intensely concerned with the relationship between religious dissent and treason. The prologue proclaims the ‘true faith and loyalty’ (10) of this ‘valiant martyr’ (9) ‘[t]o his true sovereign and his countrey’s weal’ (11). The play’s villains, however, continuously associate his heresy with treason and thereby suggest that religious dissent is ipso facto seditious. Early on, the anti-Lollard Lord Herbert sets the scene when he proclaims that ‘they were traitors all / that would maintain [Lollardy]’ (1.90–1). The play thus strikes a very Foxean note. As the martyrologist points out in his discussion of Oldcastle, already the martyrs of the primitive Church ‘were wrongfully accused of the Gentiles for insurrections & rebellions against the Emperours and Empire’,Footnote 12 and this is also the charge against which Foxe defends Oldcastle.
Ever since Mary Grace Muse Adkins’ article on ‘Sixteenth-Century Religious and Political Implications in Sir John Oldcastle’ (1942), it has been a critical commonplace that the play addresses the plight of sixteenth-century Puritans. As its deliberate anachronisms and references to sixteenth-century religious culture suggest, the fate of Oldcastle is indeed not without contemporary relevance.Footnote 13 Later critics have further argued that the play distinguishes between a radical, supposedly seditious form of Puritanism and a moderate, politically loyal form of Puritanism.Footnote 14 Significantly, Oldcastle follows Foxe in exonerating its protagonist from the charge of treason, but does not reproduce the martyrologist’s claim that the Ficket Field rebels, who allegedly rose up in Oldcastle’s name, ‘c[a]me out of Outopia, where belike this figment was first forged, and inuented’.Footnote 15 In Oldcastle, the rebels embody an all too real alternative to Oldcastle’s loyal dissent and are marked by their abuse of the rhetoric of conscience. The priest Beverley protests that ‘[w]e meant no hurt unto your Majesty, / But reformation of religion’ (12.15–16), and the rebel leader Roger Acton tells the King that ‘my conscience urged me to it’ (12.9). The rich Dunstable brewer Murley even brushes aside any concerns about the legitimacy of regicide by declaring that ‘[w]e come to fight for our conscience and for honour’ (8.34–5), although his motivation is clearly the prospect of knighthood, with which Acton lures him to join the rebellion. King Henry accordingly rejects conscience as a shallow excuse for disobedience in his confrontation with Acton:
Henry must have in mind Paul’s injunction to obey the secular magistrate in Romans 13:5: ‘Wherefore ye must be subiect, not because of wrath onely, but also for conscience sake’. Unlike the rebels, the play’s protagonist has understood that conscience may justify religious dissent, but not political rebellion:
By distinguishing between rebellious radicals and the politically loyal protagonist, Oldcastle apparently confirms Marsha Robinson’s observation that the ‘elect nation’ plays ‘both celebrate conscience and struggle to contain its anarchical, individuating impulses that threaten a Protestant consensus’.Footnote 16 However, the commonly asserted distinction between moderate and loyalist Puritans on the one hand and an extreme, revolutionary wing on the other is a problematic heuristic because the distinction between religious dissent and treason was in itself subject to controversy in the late sixteenth century. It was by no means clear, even fundamentally contested, to what extent religious dissent could be accommodated within a framework of political loyalty and at what point it turned into treason by virtue of its disregard for the monarch’s ecclesiastical authority as supreme governor of the church. Hence, the distinction between moderates and radicals does not simply describe an ideological conflict; it also reproduces an already highly charged interpretation of it.Footnote 17 One question that was particularly pressing for Puritans in the 1590s was whether loyalty entailed nothing but obedience to the monarch’s secular commands or whether it also required the acknowledgement of the monarch’s supremacy over the Church and conformity to the Elizabethan settlement. This political precariousness of Puritan dissent is also reflected in Oldcastle, which complicates any clear-cut distinction between moderate and radical dissent and puts a spotlight on the fraught relationship between secular and ecclesiastical authority in early modern England.
When King Henry and Oldcastle eventually discuss the Lollard problem, the King formulates what might be characterised as a politique or conformist religious policy that delimits secular authority in religious matters according to a distinction between private and public religion:
In other words, Henry urges Oldcastle to conform to the established religion. Oldcastle’s ‘heretical’ views are tolerable as long as they do not manifest themselves in any public form.Footnote 18 However, the play problematises such a neat pairing of conscience and private faith on the one hand and political allegiance and public action on the other and thus veers dangerously close to the breakdown of Henry’s policy of outward conformity. When the rebel leader Acton falsely claims that Oldcastle supported their cause, even the King, for a moment, loses faith in Oldcastle and starts to distrust merely outward obedience:
As soon as Oldcastle’s dissent becomes tainted with the charge of treason, the distinction between inwardness and outwardness no longer serves to demarcate a sphere of legitimate private dissent from the reach of royal authority. Instead, this disjunction is re-conceptualised as suspicious hypocrisy and a dangerous cloak for treasonous intents. For religious dissenters, the iron age of distrust and suspicion was an iron age of persecution. Henry’s concerns thus chime in with a political trend towards increasing intolerance and distrust in outward conformity in the 1580s and 1590s, which I will describe in more detail in Chapter 4. However, when Acton admits that ‘we have no other ground / But only rumour to accuse this lord’ (12.113–14), Henry steps back from the brink and acknowledges Oldcastle’s loyalty. Placing such trust in the loyalty of dissenters would have been unusual in an Elizabethan context. In fact, the King’s refusal to succumb to anti-heretical paranoia embodies an ideal of kingship that was rather wishful thinking than reality in the late sixteenth century and that would have reflected unfavourably on the period’s increasingly harsh measures of persecution.
Oldcastle’s Nonconformity
In Oldcastle, the politique distinction between inward dissent and outward obedience is problematised not only by distrust and fear of treason but also by the protagonist’s own behaviour. As it turns out, it is not so much Henry who violates the policy of outward conformity as Oldcastle himself, who cannot content himself with playing the Nicodemite. Throughout the play, Oldcastle denies treasonous intentions, but he never denies the nonconformist stance imputed to him by his enemies. Suffolk, for instance, says early on that Oldcastle ‘will not be compelled to come to mass’ (2.109). Attendance at the Mass was indeed the main target of Calvin’s anti-Nicodemite campaign and marked the touchstone of the true Christian’s duty to avoid idolatry in Catholic territories.Footnote 19 As Calvin further argues in one of the sermons published by Munday, ‘we are not taught of God, onelye for our selues, but that euery man, after the measure of his faith, should brotherly communicate, with his neighbours, and distribut vnto them, that thing he hath learned, and knowen in Gods schole’.Footnote 20 That is to say, Henry’s conformist programme clashes with the duty of the godly to proselytise. As the Bishop of Rochester points out, Oldcastle has apparently been doing just that:
Oldcastle’s supposed ‘spurning at the ceremonies’ would presumably have resonated with Puritan complaints about clerical vestments or the form in which the sacraments were administered, such as the making of the sign of the cross in the Baptismal rite or kneeling when receiving the communion.
When the King urges Oldcastle not ‘to suffer any meetings to be had / Within your house’, he likewise suggests that Oldcastle, who does not deny having done so, was indeed actively supporting the Lollard cause. Importantly, even though Henry frames his admonition as advice at this point – ‘let me counsel ye that might command’ (6.22) – Oldcastle has indeed violated previous royal commands not to hold Lollard meetings. As one of the judges proclaims in the first scene of the play, the King’s command was that
Henry’s command resonates with medieval as well as with Elizabethan legislation of religious dissent. As for Henry’s command that ‘[t]here be no meetings’, it is not entirely clear whether Oldcastle is drawing on historical legislation and, if so, what laws exactly.Footnote 21 At any rate, Foxe is quite clear that there was legislation that penalised conventicles in the sharpest terms. Foxe does not deny that Acton and his associates were executed for treason, even if they had no seditious intents, perhaps because they ‘did frequent among themselues, some conuenticles (which conuenticles was made treason by the statute aforesayd) either in those Thickets or in some place els’.Footnote 22 The play similarly acknowledges that even Oldcastle’s supposedly loyalist nonconformity stands in contradiction with not just the ambitions of the corrupt clergy but also the direct will of the King. When Henry eventually tells Oldcastle that ‘for some good service you have done, / We for our part are pleased to pardon you’ (6.4–5), there is indeed something to be pardoned. It seems highly questionable, therefore, whether Oldcastle really embodies the perfect loyalty of a supposedly moderate Puritan that is usually ascribed to him.
Moreover, Oldcastle’s activities would also have been in breach of a recent and important sixteenth-century piece of legislation, namely, the 1593 Act against Seditious Sectaries mentioned earlier in this chapter. The act required nonconformists ‘to yeald themselves to come to some Churche Chappell or usuall Place of Commen Prayer, and heare Devyne Service, accordinge to her Majesties Lawes and Statutes’.Footnote 23 Admittedly, Oldcastle’s refusal ‘to come to mass’ (2.109) does not necessarily mean that he categorically stays away from church services. Absenting oneself from the service during the communion was a widespread Elizabethan practice.Footnote 24 However, the 1593 act incriminates not only Protestants who ‘abstayne from commynge to Churche to heare Devyne Service’ but also those who refuse ‘to receyve the Communyon’.Footnote 25 Like Henry’s command in Oldcastle, the act further penalises ‘unlaufull Assemblies Conventicles or Meetinges uuder [sic] colour or pretence of any exercise of Religion’.Footnote 26 Oldcastle, who refuses to go to Mass and apparently promotes Lollard conventicles of some sort, clearly does not comply with secular authority in the fullest sense – neither in the legal framework of the play’s historical context nor according to the standard of Elizabethan legislation of religious dissent. Oldcastle’s nonconformity thus complicates the play’s discourses of conscience and political loyalty to an extent that has not yet been fully recognised in previous criticism.
The controversial status of Oldcastle’s loyalty is most glaring in the question of royal supremacy. Of course, Puritans rejected Papal authority, but they did not really warm to royal supremacy either. The Book of Discipline, the Puritan blueprint for an ecclesiastical constitution, provided no role at all for the monarch, as Richard Bancroft observed in his scorching review of the document: ‘there is not once mention made of any authoritie, or office, in or ouer the Church; belonging to the Christian ciuile magistsrate. He hath not so much, as eyther voyce or place, in any of their Synodes, as a member thereof’.Footnote 27 The 1593 Act against Seditious Sectaries accordingly penalised any claims ‘to denye withstande and ympugne her Majestie Power and Authoritie in Causes Ecclesiasticall’.Footnote 28 When Oldcastle declares his loyalty to Henry, he complies at least with one aspect entailed by royal supremacy, namely, a vociferous denunciation of Papal authority. In his pious zeal, however, Oldcastle silently passes over the issue of the monarch’s authority over the Church and begs the King that his ‘conscience may not be encroached upon’.
The simple repudiation of Papal authority does not mean, as David Bevington has suggested, that ‘Henry and Oldcastle are thus as one in their belief that the church must be subject to royal authority and reformed under the king’s direction’.Footnote 29 Oldcastle’s insistence that he will only yield ‘[i]f out of Holy Scripture they can prove / That I am in an error’ is a fitting insistence on sola scriptura for a first-generation Reformation hero. In the context of the 1590s, however, when apologists of the Church of England made a case for the authority of the monarch to regulate so-called things indifferent, such as ‘the ceremonies / That are of ancient custom in the Church’ (2.8–9) which Oldcastle apparently spurns, he would rather have sounded like a radical nonconformist.
Oldcastle’s conception of loyalty is thus hardly coterminous with the acknowledgement of royal supremacy but to be defined more narrowly as obedience to the monarch in all secular matters. Remarkably, Henry is quite open to such a conception of loyalty. When he counsels Oldcastle to abandon his nonconformity instead of commanding him to do so, Oldcastle replies in terms vague enough that if ‘my life in any of these points / Deserves th’attainder of ignoble thoughts’ (6.28–9), he would that ‘even the utmost rigour may be shown’ (6.31). The King, however, does not insist on a more explicit declaration of obedience or a confirmation of royal supremacy on Oldcastle’s part. On the contrary, he seems to scale back his expectations to a conception of loyalty that does not require complete conformity: ‘Let it suffice we know your loyalty’ (6.32). To be clear, Henry did explicitly prohibit conventicles and other manifestations of nonconformity earlier in the play, and this prohibition had been justified with a reference to ‘the King’s prerogative’ (1.99). In his interview with Oldcastle, however, Henry does not insist on his prerogative in matters of religion and thus allows, at least temporarily, for a reconciliation of nonconformity with political loyalty. It is indeed only in such an ad hoc form of religious toleration, driven by pragmatism and the monarch’s individual disposition rather than by constitutional principle, that Elizabethan Puritans could realistically place their hopes.Footnote 30
Finally, the play advances an interpretation of what exactly would constitute a violation of royal supremacy in words that, once again, are attuned to Puritan concerns in the 1590s. When Beverley defends himself after the failed rebellion by claiming that ‘[w]e meant no hurt unto your Majesty, / But reformation of religion’ (12.15–16), Henry replies:
This passage is arguably Henry’s most determined bid for royal supremacy. The Elizabethan Act of SupremacyFootnote 31 authorised the monarch ‘to visite refourme redres order correcte and amende all such Erroures Heresies Scismes Abuses Offences Contemptes and Enormitees whatsoever … to the Pleasure of Almightye God thencrease of Vertue and the Conservac[i]on of the Peace and Unitie of this Realme’Footnote 32 – a clause that was also cited by opponents of Puritan reform initiatives in Parliament.Footnote 33 At first glance, Henry seems to stake out a similarly exclusive claim to reforming religion, just as his earlier suppression of conventicles appealed to his ‘prerogative’, a term that likely reminded the play’s audiences of Elizabeth’s governorship over the Church.Footnote 34
However, Henry also makes an important distinction between mere petitions and active efforts to reform religion. In this regard, the scene can also be read as a retrospective vindication of Presbyterian agitation, which had led to the high-profile Star Chamber trial of nine Puritan ministers in 1591.Footnote 35 The ministers were accused of intending to set The Book of Discipline into practice without royal or episcopal authorisation, which would have constituted a violation of royal supremacy. However, they disavowed any intention of doing so and argued that the book was merely a proposal for reform. The Act for the Submission of the ClergyFootnote 36 had stipulated the repeal of all ecclesiastical laws that were ‘muche prejudiciall to the Kyng’s prerogatyve royall and repugn[a]nt to the lawes and statutes of this Realme’.Footnote 37 According to Robert Beale, whose argumentation was also adopted by other Presbyterians who had subscribed to The Book of Discipline, the failure of subsequent attempts to establish a new corpus of ecclesiastical law had placed the responsibility for its reformation on the whole commonwealth.Footnote 38 By submitting The Book of Discipline for consideration, the Presbyterians were therefore merely doing their duty as loyal subjects. Beale, however, conceded that any attempts to set the book into practice would indeed have been illegal.Footnote 39
In Oldcastle, Henry seems to vindicate this argumentation when he insists that ‘good subjects would make known their grief, / And pray amendment, not enforce the same’. This is by no means a commonplace assertion of royal authority. After all, the right to voice one’s opinion on matters of religion was highly contested during Elizabeth’s reign. As Patrick Collinson points out, ‘Beale was claiming for an entirely unprivileged group of private individuals powers which Elizabeth would not even concede to her own Parliament’.Footnote 40 Elizabeth was perfectly clear on this point when a parliamentary committee was established on 8 March 1587 in order to compose a petition for better training for the clergy and against Whitgift’s harsh anti-Puritan proceedings. In her response, the Queen rejected even mere petitions as an infringement of her royal prerogative:
Hir Majestie taketh your petition herein to be againste the prerogative of hir Croune. For by your full consentes it hathe bene confirmed and enacted (as the truth therein requireth) that the full power, authoritie, iurisdiccion and supremacie in Church causes which heretofore the Popes usurped, and tooke to them selves, shoulde be united and annexed to the imperiall Croune of this realme.Footnote 41
As Elizabeth told Parliament through Lord Chancellor Hatton once more two years later, it had no right to ‘meddle with anie such matters or causes of religion, excepte it be to bridle all those, whether papists or puritanes, which are therewithall discontented’.Footnote 42 Indeed, some of the more determined Puritan MPs, such as Peter Wentworth, Anthony Cope, James Morice, and others, were repeatedly arrested for their parliamentary speeches and initiatives.Footnote 43
The bill that eventually resulted in the Act against Seditious SectariesFootnote 44 likewise caused considerable unease in the Commons on 4 April 1593, especially because it stipulated a restriction of free speech that went far beyond the question of parliamentary privileges. The bill would have incriminated all who ‘shall deface our devine service’, even if only by ‘open speaking’.Footnote 45 Since Beale and Morice had been placed under house arrest,Footnote 46 it fell to Nicholas Fuller and Henry Finch to lead the opposition. Fuller, who had already supported the nine Puritan ministers in the Star Chamber,Footnote 47 was alarmed by the prospect of being completely muzzled in matters of religion: ‘Whosoever writeth or speaketh in these matters of controversy is within the danger of this law, for if he write or speake against any thinge that / is auctorised by law though he write not with a malitious intent against the Quene … it shall be intended malitiously’.Footnote 48 Henry Finch, another common lawyer with Puritan sympathies, objected that ‘[t]o a man’[s] neerest frend it is not safe to speake; ffor though a men [sic] speake but against nonresidency, excommunication as it is used, or any other abuse in the Church, he incurrs the danger of this lawe’.Footnote 49 In none too subtle a gesture of intimidation, the separatists Herny Barrow and John Greenwood were hanged two days later, on 6 April. As one contemporary observed, ‘it is playnley sayd … that theyr execution proced[ed] of malice of the Bishopps to spite the nether house which hath provoked ther moch hatred among the common people affected that way’.Footnote 50 In the end, the bill was heavily amended by a committee of the Commons before it passed, but free speech in matters of religion was evidently a precarious good in late Elizabethan England.
In Oldcastle, Henry’s liberal concession that good subjects may make known their grief thus tallies with a highly contested, Puritan interpretation of the right of subjects to partake in ecclesiastical deliberations. However, it also rings rather hollow in the light of a long history of Puritan parliamentary initiatives that had come to nothing owing to the Queen’s heavy-handed suppression of any challenge to her religious settlement. Henry ends on a politically highly charged note when he proclaims that subjects should ‘not enforce [their grief] / Unless their king were tyrant which I hope / You cannot justly say that Harry is’ (12.22–4). Henry’s casual concession that resistance to a tyrant may actually be lawful is remarkable and flies in the face of Tudor orthodoxy. The contrast between Henry’s own liberality and Elizabeth’s usual parliamentary obstructionism could hardly have been missed by spectators with any interest in contemporary church politics. Even more, this contrast may have suggested that Elizabeth’s suppression of free speech is actually an instance of the kind of tyranny that Henry disavows. If Henry is, at least in his treatment of religious dissent, an idealised monarch who validates the political views of a supposedly moderate and loyalist Puritan party, then the idea of moderate and loyalist Puritanism is really stretched to breaking point. Rather than celebrating the ‘elect nation’ or expressing allegiance to the Elizabethan settlement, Oldcastle ominously intimates that the patience of the silenced brethren is not without limits.
Theatre, Hypocrisy, and Espionage
The nonconformist ethos of Oldcastle is also mirrored in its ambivalent attitude towards theatricality. As Marsha Robinson observes, the play ‘disengages Falstaff, the consummate player of parts, from Oldcastle, the martyr, reincarnating an Oldcastle whose identity is fixed, rooted in inner “truth”’.Footnote 51 This ethical reorientation towards an inner truth to which the martyr testifies with his own blood leaves little leeway for a positive appraisal of dissimulation. However, Falstaff’s hypocrisy resurfaces in the priest Sir John of Wrotham. Like Falstaff, who calls himself ‘kind Jack Falstaff, true Jack Falstaff’ (1H4 2.4.463), this priest calls himself ‘kind Sir John of Wrotham, honest Jack’ (2.149). However, whereas Shakespeare celebrates Falstaff’s theatricality and makes a genuine case for dissimulation as a life-giving principle, the hypocritical Sir John is a good deal less charming than Falstaff – and also a good deal more reprehensible.
Sir John’s theatricality has nothing to do with legitimate dissimulation as a means of self-preservation. His is the alleged hypocrisy of the Catholic clergy, which was habitually exposed in earlier polemical and didactic Protestant drama.Footnote 52 Sir John is thus arguably an embodiment of what Ritchie D. Kendall has called ‘the stratagem of self-exorcism’ of nonconformist drama,Footnote 53 the attempt to come to terms with the paradoxical formulation of a nonconformist ethos in a medium that relies on dissimulation. Thus, Oldcastle is stripped of Falstaff’s habits of dissimulation, which in turn are transferred to and condemned in meta-theatrical fashion in the hypocritical priest, the martyr’s theatrical double. In the play’s first soliloquy, Sir John declares:
Sir John is a consummate shape-shifter, as is evident in this heterogeneous and contradictory patchwork of different theatrical traditions, which includes the morality Vice, the hypocritical stock priest of anti-Catholic drama, the ideal of good fellowship, and the Machiavellian dissembler. In brief, Sir John ‘represents the self as a constructed artifice’.Footnote 54 Sir John’s first costume, the sheep’s clothing, recalls Christ’s warning against false prophets, who ‘come to you in shepes clothing, but inwardely they are rauening wolues’ (Matt. 7:15). He adopts this role in his minor but nasty part in the machinations against Oldcastle when he maintains the façade of ‘[a]n honest country prelate who laments / To see such foul disorder in the Church’ (2.30–1). This ‘honest country prelate’ is, as the play gradually reveals, a thief and nothing but ‘a priest in show’. However, the play does not fail to point out that the priest shares his profession with ‘that foul villainous guts, that led him to all that roguery … that Falstaff’ (10.82–3). When Sir John robs the disguised King, the latter is indeed given to nostalgic reminiscing about his good old days, or rather nights, as a minion of the moon: ‘Where the devil are all my old thieves that were wont to keep this walk? Falstaff, the villain, is so fat he cannot get on’s horse; but methinks Poins and Peto should be stirring hereabouts’ (10.52–5). Sir John’s rapacious tendencies are thus associated with one of the period’s most popular stage characters, which might seem to palliate to some extent the anti-Catholicism that he embodies.
Additionally, Sir John insists that he is ‘an honest thief; / One that will take it where it may be spared, / And spend it freely in good fellowship’. Sir John thus invokes Robin Hood, who had only recently been on stage in Munday’s Downfall of Robert Earl of Huntingdon and Death of Robert Earl of Huntingdon (1598) and whose merry men are likewise repeatedly characterised as ‘good fellows’.Footnote 55 In Shakespeare’s Tribe, Jeffrey Knapp has argued that the ideal of good fellowship implies an inclusive, Erasmian stance towards religious difference.Footnote 56 Musa Gurnis-Farrell has accordingly suggested that by invoking good fellowship, Oldcastle ‘generates an inclusive stage representation of English Catholicism’, even though this may never have been the authors’ intention.Footnote 57 As Gurnis-Farrell points out, ‘[t]he production of plays in the early modern commercial theater was a process of cultural bricolage. Playwrights used what tropes they had to hand to meet the market’s demand for new plays that cashed in on current dramatic trends’.Footnote 58 Undoubtedly, Sir John is the result of such bricolage, which may well generate semantic effects beyond any individual author’s intention or control. A case in point is the reconciliation between Sir John and Oldcastle’s servant Harpool: ‘Give me thy hand; thou art as good a fellow. I am a singer, a drinker, a bencher, a wencher. I can say a mass and kiss a lass’ (4.182–3), to which Harpool replies: ‘Well said, mad priest. We’ll in and be friends’ (4.186). However, such rogue ecumenicism is hardly commendable in the overall context of the play. For a start, Harpool’s Protestant credentials are dubious.Footnote 59 And while Gurnis-Farrell claims that Sir John’s good fellowship is a redeeming trait in an otherwise polemical satire of a Catholic priest, one might wonder if it is not rather the ideal of good fellowship that is tarnished by its association with Sir John and other unsavoury characters. In Oldcastle, the epithet ‘good fellow’ is used in an inflationary and almost indiscriminate manner that severely questions its desirability. Although the term never entirely loses its positive evaluation of sociability, it also describes highly problematic behaviour, as when Sir John declares that ‘a good fellow parson may have a chapel of ease [i.e. sexual gratification] where his parish church is far off’ (4.16–17). When Sir John robs the disguised King, he calls himself again ‘good fellow’ and tells the King: ‘if thou be a good fellow, play the good fellow’s part; deliver thy purse without more ado’ (10.42–3). Even more problematically, Acton calls one of his fellow-rebels ‘good fellow’ (8.51). In such moments, the play veers closely towards the scepticism that Puritans often displayed towards an undiscriminating ideal of good fellowship.Footnote 60 Any higher spiritual purpose in good fellowship, as well as any conception of the theatre in line with this ideal, is severely compromised in Oldcastle.
Finally, there is an almost Machiavellian element to Sir John’s dissimulation. His revelation of a radical disparity between inward and outward self in an early soliloquy is typical for the stage Machiavel,Footnote 61 as is his boastful rhetoric and vocabulary when he proclaims that he has ‘as many shapes as Proteus had / That still, when any villainy is done, / There may be none suspect it was Sir John’ (2.161–3). In moments like this, Sir John sounds almost like Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who ‘can add colours to the chameleon, / Change shapes with Proteus for advantages, / And set the murderous Machiavel to school’ (3H6 3.2.191–3). Proteus and the chameleon are prominent early modern symbols of changeability, inconstancy, and deceit, which only rarely possess positive connotations outside Neoplatonic and Erasmian traditions. They also feature prominently in early modern anti-theatrical literature,Footnote 62 as for instance in A second and third blast of retrait from plaies and Theaters, commonly ascribed to Munday: ‘Plaiers can not better be compared than to the Camelion’.Footnote 63 An anti-theatrical flavour is indeed unmistakable in the characterisation of Sir John, given that he seems to own a well-stocked wardrobe of disguises that enable his illicit ventures. He is once described as ‘a fellow with one eye that has robbed two clothiers’ (4.94), a fitting target for his needs, and when he relieves the King of his gold, he is ‘all in green’ (11.99). The garb of a priest, it seems, is just one of Sir John’s many costumes. Theatricality in Oldcastle thus is not associated with the accommodation of good fellowship but is rather a cloak for clerical abuses, especially the hypocrisy, exploitation, and persecutory practices ascribed to the Catholic clergy in Protestant polemics. Sir John thus embodies the ‘strident histrionics’ of the Foxean Catholic clergy, ‘mere actors who play a false part’, whose ‘private thoughts are contained in Machiavellian moments of calculating shrewdness’.Footnote 64 It comes as no surprise then that the King has little tolerance for Sir John’s dubious activities:
Sir John talks his way out of even these dire straits with the bold move of pointing out that the King too once was one of Diana’s foresters. Nonetheless, Henry’s condemnation loses none of its moral urgency. In line with the anti-Catholic drama of earlier Protestant polemicists such as John Bale, the hypocritical theatricality of the clergy is to be exposed; the sheep’s clothing must be torn off the ravening wolves.
However, such self-reflexive theatricality, which draws attention to the artificiality of its own representations, can also claim epistemological value for the institution of the theatre. With its meta-theatricality, the play constantly reminds its audiences not to trust outward appearances. As a form of dissimulation, the theatre is therefore paradoxically able to discover and expose its targets, in this case the alleged hypocrisy of the Catholic clergy (and, presumably, their spiritual heirs in the Church of England), whose behaviour is coded in such explicitly theatrical terms in the play. Such an approach to the theatre’s epistemic status, which uncovers truth by means of theatrical falsehood, is embodied on the level of the plot by the protagonist’s role as a spy in the Southampton Plot. Notably, the scene is unhistorical and has no known sources. It is a deliberate addition by the playwrights, quite possibly by Munday, and is therefore particularly revealing for the play’s approach to dissimulation.Footnote 65 When the conspirators try to recruit Oldcastle, the latter initially plays along: ‘Notorious treason! Yet I will conceal / My secret thoughts to sound the depth of it’ (7.139). Surprisingly, Oldcastle immediately succeeds in persuading the remarkably daft conspirators to sign the document containing the plan and justification of the revolt (7.126–7, 167–76), which he carries immediately to the King. Oldcastle thus dissembles, paradoxically, in the service of the truth:
Oldcastle does not dissemble in order to conceal but in order to reveal treason. Just as the tradition of anti-Catholic drama invoked in the portrayal of Sir John claims to uncover hypocrisy, Oldcastle’s dissimulation is committed to an ethos of exposure.
Kristin Bezio detects such a ‘combination of spycraft and stagecraft’ already in Munday’s early career as a dramatist, especially in Fedele and Fortunio (1584). In this adaptation of Luigi Pasqualigo’s Il Fedele, the combination of role-playing and espionage ‘strongly parallels the situation occupied by Munday himself’ when he claimed to have infiltrated Catholic communities abroad in order to spy on them.Footnote 66 In Oldcastle, the target of such histrionic spycraft is a form of radical proto-Protestantism that is presented as equally treasonous as the Jesuits. In fact, there is a remarkable parallel between Oldcastle’s dissimulation in the play and the espionage which Munday practised not only against Catholics but also as a pursuivant in Archbishop Whitgift’s campaign against the Puritan movement.Footnote 67 Munday’s most notable victim was the Puritan preacher Giles Wigginton, who was suspected to be involved in the Marprelate tracts. On 6 December 1588, Munday visited Wigginton in his London lodgings with a commission to bring him to the Archbishop. On their journey to Lambeth, however, he feigned sympathy with Wigginton’s claim that the prelates ‘should not long endure, nor prosper at all’.Footnote 68 Munday managed to win the confidence of Wigginton, apparently as daft as the Southampton conspirators in Oldcastle, and got Wigginton to admit that he knew Martin’s work well.Footnote 69
Munday’s dissimulation against a supposed radical like Wigginton, who eventually fell in with ‘Frantick Hacket’Footnote 70 and was accused of espousing populist resistance theory,Footnote 71 is echoed in the religious politics of Oldcastle. Despite its Puritan sympathies, the play likewise throws the Southampton conspirators and the radicals of the Ficket Field Rebellion, who share Wigginton’s creed that they may take reform into their own hands, under the bus without the least scruples. Like Munday, the protagonist of Oldcastle acts as an agent provocateur in order to undermine the conspirators, whose endeavour may not be motivated by religion, but who are clearly willing to exploit religious discontent for their seditious purposes (7.135–8). This is not to say that Munday’s work for Whitgift and Oldcastle are both expressions of a specific and stable, ‘moderately Puritan’ disposition on Munday’s part. Munday’s personal convictions throughout the 1580s and 1590s, if he had any, will likely remain a mystery. However, the parallels between Oldcastle’s espionage and Munday’s own work for Whitgift put a spotlight on the continuities between religious dissimulation and the theatre in the early modern period. As these parallels further accentuate, the play’s ethos of exposure, which is exemplified by Oldcastle’s espionage, did not only serve to expose Catholic hypocrisy but could also be put to the service of the suppression of Protestant dissenters. This ambiguity is equally evident in the play, which occupies an ideological position that could be construed as violating royal supremacy, but which nonetheless – or precisely for this reason – rests on the vociferous condemnation of a militant fringe. This, notably, was a common strategy employed by Puritans in order to assert their own supposed political probity.Footnote 72
As I have argued in this chapter, Oldcastle can be read as a refutation of Shakespeare’s take on the Lollard martyr in Falstaff in a number of ways. First of all, the authors of Oldcastle emphasise the nonconformist credentials of the Lollard to an extent that has been underestimated by previous critics. Even though the play goes to great lengths to emphasise the political loyalty of its protagonist, especially in the contrast with the Ficket Field Rebels and the Southampton conspirators, its political stance is more complicated. The play’s condemnation of rebellion is not simply an unconditional declaration of obedience on the government’s own terms. Just as the self-identification of a segment of the godly as moderate Puritans was often a strategic form of self-fashioning that cannot be taken at face value, Oldcastle’s ostensible condemnation of treason is primarily a rhetorical manoeuvre that serves to shift the coordinates of loyalty in favour of a more nuanced challenge to royal supremacy. Instead of cherishing politique tolerance for private dissent as Shakespeare arguably does with Falstaff, the play is critical of the silencing of religious dissent in the 1590s and suggests that an overbearing crackdown on religious dissent amounts to tyranny. Second, this nonconformist ethos also manifests itself in the play’s highly ambivalent theatricality, embodied most prominently in its anti-Falstaff figure, Sir John of Wrotham. However, in a self-reflexive epistemology of discovery, the play also recalls earlier anti-Catholic drama that was dedicated to exposing hypocrisy by means of a meta-theatrical emphasis on the artificiality of its own representations. Finally, as Oldcastle’s role as a spy suggests, this ethos of exposure could paradoxically be turned against dissenters themselves. As I will discuss in more detail in Chapter 6, when the state renounced its reticence in making windows into men’s hearts, it was often not the hypocrisy of the tyrannical clergy but that of seditious Puritans that was to be exposed as empty theatricality. The next two chapters, however, are dedicated to Catholic perspectives on religious dissent and the manner in which the aggressive inquiry into the secrets of English Catholics was reflected in Elizabethan and Jacobean drama.