Two Books About Reformation England

More precisely, two reviews of books about Reformation England. I haven’t read either of the books, but the reviews are interesting in themselves. First, Craig Burrell on Eamon Duffy’s Fires of Faith, a study of the brief and tragic (from several points of view) reign of Mary Tudor. Like, I suppose, most Protestants (or at least those on the British branch of the tree), I grew up accepting the view of “Bloody Mary” as a monster waging a last-ditch effort on behalf of evil against good. That there was anything at all to be said in her favor did not occur to me, nor did I realize that her half-sister Elizabeth was every bit as ready as she to have people killed for their religion, until my interest in the Catholic Church prompted me to look at the other side of the story. Fires of Faith seems to be a word in her favor.

Coincidentally…wait, they’re both Canadian, so probably it’s Not A Coincidence…the blogger and historian who calls herself Alias Clio (or else Musette, Clio’s mortal servant) has begun posting again at her blog, The Other World, and her first post is a review of Wolf Hall, a novel based on the life of Thomas Cromwell, known to admirers of A Man for All Seasons and of Saint Thomas More as one of the villians of that drama. Hilary Mantel, the author of Wolf Hall, apparently set out to rehabilitate Cromwell by portraying him as a sort of early Modern Man who has no use for all that religious mumbo-jumbo and wants to free the state from entanglement with it. A.C. comments very astutely on that.

I had previously seen this novel reviewed by Christopher Hitchens in The Atlantic, who, not surprisingly, thought it wonderful, and, a bit surprisingly, described Thomas More as “one of history’s wickedest men,” which seems rather much even for Hitchens. It is a little peculiar that someone like Hitchens would prefer the ruthless and unscrupulous Cromwell to the principled More–or, well, it would be peculiar if one didn’t know Hitchens to be unhinged on the subject of religion. Alias Clio’s review is much more insightful:

For Wolf Hall is a Whig history: it offers us a Cromwell much like ourselves as our eye into the past, while we are the novel’s heroes.

I used to have The Other World in my list of external links here, but removed it when it seemed to have gone silent for good. I’ll have to put it back, and make several other updates to that list. I have a sort of informal rule that a blog which hasn’t been updated for a year will be removed, and I’m sorry to see that it’s been almost that long since the last post at Thursday Night Gumbo.

8 responses to “Two Books About Reformation England”

  1. This would presumably be the Cromwell who declared on the scaffold that he died a Catholic?

  2. Did he? I didn’t know that. The Wikipedia bio says he asserted that he “died in the traditional faith,” which in that context I suppose would have meant Catholic.

  3. Janet Cupo

    You know, Jeff Woodward started a new blog called The Coming and Passing of Things and he hasn’t posted on Thursday Night Gumbo since then. Jeff Vehige had almost completely quit posing already.
    AMDG

  4. Last time I looked at Jeff W’s new blog, it had been silent for some months, too. Let’s see…ah, he’s cranking it up again.

  5. Well, his reported words were:
    “I die in the Catholic Faith, not doubting in any article of my faith, no nor doubting in any Sacrament of the Church. Many have slandered me, and reported that I have been a bearer, of such as have maintained evil opinions, which is untrue, but I confess that like as God by his holy spirit, doth instruct us in the truth, so the devil is ready to seduce us, and I have been seduced: but bear me witness that I die in the Catholic Faith of the Holy Church.”
    But some historians think this may just be the “official version” of the time.

  6. “official” because the fellow Protestants who engineered his downfall needed to justify calling him an enemy of the state, I guess?

  7. If memory serves, this was during the semi-counter-reformation that followed Catherine Howard catching Henry’s eye (religious policy increasingly having a tendency to follow the king’s codpiece).

  8. It’s dismal to think of the effect his…as people might say today, “issues”…had on the course of history.

Leave a reply to Paul Cancel reply