Quarrel with the King (32 page)

Read Quarrel with the King Online

Authors: Adam Nicolson

BOOK: Quarrel with the King
7.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Another question emerges from that: Was the vitality of the chalkland valley communities dependent on a powerful overlord? Or could anything resembling the vivid communal life embodied in “the custom of the manor” have survived in a system that did not depend on hierarchy and dominance? Maybe not. Communities need to obey agreed laws, and those laws need to be imposed.

This, in the end, is surely the moral of the Pembrokes and their Wiltshire valleys. They were defending their own against an encroaching state. As individuals, they were clearly fallible, corrupt, self-seeking, vacillating, irresolute, irascible, and at times less than articulate. But their story is not about individualism; it is about their joint belief in a version of the communal, in which principles both of hierarchy and of mutuality were deeply embedded. That is a strange pairing to modern minds. We think that hierarchy is bound to be domineering, and that mutuality cannot have hierarchy as one of its elements. The virtue of the Arcadianism this book has described was that, in an evolved and balanced way, it understood how to accommodate these contradictory principles.

It is important, of course, to recognize that those who were most energetic in promoting this system were those who benefited most from it. Did the poor really like the stasis and exclusion of the copyhold manor? Probably not. The eruption of popular anger and violence in the Civil War might well be seen as the expression of a rage whose origins were in generations of oppression and denial that the old system had imposed.

Nor is it likely that the elite rural idyll was something the Pembrokes' tenants wholly subscribed to. George Herbert's description of his parishioners as a dumb and sullen lot, scarcely dancing their way to the fields or church, must have some truth in it. Arcadianism
didn't always feel Arcadian if you were a member of the caste. Nor, importantly, were the people of these valleys unreconstructed rustics, as Herbert and others were tempted to describe them. The streets of Salisbury, until controlled and cleared by the city authorities, were as chaotic and frightening and as full of importuning and sometimes aggressive beggars as the streets of Calcutta. Much of the valley of the Nadder, to the west of the city, was busy with traffic and distinctly suburban in character by the early part of the seventeenth century.

So, for all the communal ideology, there is a divergence between the wish-fulfillment ideals of the Pembrokes and the reality of ordinary lives. The examples toward the end of this book of all the stresses and strains in the run-up to the Civil War—the seeking for market solutions to chronic poverty, the disobedience of communal laws, and the ever-present sense of violence and abuse—all that may well have occurred earlier, but the evidence has not survived. Documents from the Tudor decades are much thinner on the ground than those from the early seventeenth century, particularly the quarter sessions records, which survive in quantity only from the beginning of the reign of James I. The dream of perfection undoubtedly sheltered in its heart both a systematic limit placed on the individual and his liberties and a natural human effort to escape and resist that limitation.

It was an exploitative world: How, except by exploitation, could the earls have paid for their luxuries from the rents and fines of their copyhold tenants? But it was also a world that in its ideals and practice was alive with a sense of jointness, of a joint enterprise between the different connected parts of the social organism. It lived above all in its gatherings: at the village courts, at the masques and tournaments, at the hay harvest and the wheat harvest, at the plays in the candlelit halls, at the great funerals, and eventually at the desperate hilltop meetings during the Civil War. It is a world that has entirely disappeared, but one whose virtues disappeared with its faults.

Manuscript Sources

SWINDON AND WILTSHIRE RECORD OFFICE

A1/110 Great Rolls of Wiltshire Quarter Sessions (1631E/151 for the libel sung by Jane Norrice of Stoke Verdon; 1642H/158 and 1646T/179 for marks of the illiterate villagers)

G23/1/40 A list of losses by the citizens of Salisbury, December 1644

P2/L/268 William Locke's Inventory, 1660

P5/1626/11 Probate inventory reused to record costs of parliamentarian soldiers quartered in Fisherton Anger, 1645

212B/7181 Final agreement on marriage of Charles, Lord Herbert, and Lady Mary Villiers, 1635

784/1 Parish Register of Odstock, Wiltshire, 1541–1745

1553/25 1563 Survey of “Terrae Pembrochianae”

2057/A1/2 Pembroke estate surveys and Wilton domestic accounts, 1630s

2057/F1/2 George Owen,
A Catalogue of all the Earls of Pembroke
, c.1625

2057/F1/14 Sermon delivered at the funeral of William, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, 1630

2057/F2/1
Catalogue of the nobilitie of England
, 1628

2057/F2/36 Garter Statutes drawn up for 3rd Earl of Pembroke

2057/H1/1a Inigo Jones/John Webb drawings

2057/H5/1 Wilton House inventory and valuation 1683

2057/P1/49 Plan to accompany sale particulars of Pembroke estates at Bower Chalke, Broad Chalke, Stoke Farthing, and Bishopstone, 1919

2292/2 A transcript of a letter about the capture of Marlborough during the Civil War, mid-nineteenth century

SHEFFIELD ARCHIVES

EM1351–1362

Elmhirst Muniments: Executorship and Financial Papers of Sir Robert Pye

Articles of Agreement between the La. Dutchess of Buckingham and the Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, 1635

HOUSE OF LORDS JOURNAL OFFICE

Main papers 10/14/7/3527 Pembroke dispute with Mowbray, July 1641

10/1/23 Summons to York from King Charles to E of Pembroke, May 1642

Note x.B.B. 108 Pembroke's draft apology, July 1641

10/14/9/3616 Assessment of estates, Feb 1643

10/1/130 Appointment as Ld Lieutenant Monmouth, July 1642

10/1/139 Letter re demands for money, Dec 1642

10/1/142 Servants to Oxford, Jan 1643

10/1/156 Cutting down trees and killing deer in Hyde Park, August 1643

PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE, KEW

SP 14 State papers domestic, James I

SP 16 State papers domestic, Charles I

SP 18 State papers domestic, interregnum

SP 25 Council of State papers

HATFIELD HOUSE

Accounts, general, 12/19

Bills, 247, 670

BRITISH LIBRARY

Sloane MS 4014 Thomas Moffet (or Muffet) illustrated manuscript volume of spiders and insects

Add MSS 40630 f 234 Wiltshire Committee for Sequestrations

Add MSS 30305 f 76 Letter to Sir Thomas Fairfax re Clubmen

Add MSS 34195 Pembroke's row with Maltravers

Printed Sources

Adamson, John. “The Baronial Context of the English Civil War.”
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
, 5th series, 40 (1990), 93–120.

———. “Parliamentary Management, Men of Business, and the House of Lords, 1640–49.” In Clive Jones, ed.,
A Pillar of the Constitution
(London, 1989), 21–50.

———. “Politics and the Nobility in Civil-War England,”
Historical Journal
34 (1991): 231–55.

———.
The Noble Revolt: The Overthrow of Charles I
. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2007.

Alpers, Paul.
What Is Pastoral?
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996.

Aubrey, John.
The Natural History of Wiltshire
. Wiltshire Topographical Society, 1847.

Aylmer, G. E.
The Struggle for the Constitution
. Blandford Press, 1975

Barnes, Susan J., Nora de Poorter, Oliver Millar, and Horst Vey.
Van Dyck: A Complete Catalogue of the Paintings
. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2004.

Batey, Matey.
Alexander Pope: The Poet and the Landscape
. Barn Elms Publishing, 1999.

Beal, Mary.
A Study of Richard Symonds: His Italian Notebooks
. Garland, 1984.

Berry, Edward.
Shakespeare and the Hunt
. Cambridge University Press, 2001.

Bettey, Joseph.
Wiltshire Farming in the Seventeenth Century
. Wiltshire Record Society, 2005.

Bold, John, with John Reeves.
Wilton House & English Palladianism
. London: HMSO, 1988.

Buchanan-Brown, John, ed.
John Aubrey: Brief Lives
. New York: Penguin, 2000.

Bremmer, Jan, and Herman Roodenburg.
A Cultural History of Gesture
. Polity Press, 1991.

Brigden, Susan.
New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule of the Tudors 1485–1603
. New York: Penguin, 2000.

Brown, Christopher.
Van Dyck
. Phaidon, 1982.

Burgess, Glenn.
The Politics of the Ancient Constitution: An Introduction to English Political Thought, 1603
–
1642
. New York: Macmillan, 1992.

———.
Absolute Monarchy and the Stuart Constitution
. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1996.

Campbell, Mildred.
The English Yeoman.
New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1942.

Carlton, Charles.
Going to the Wars: The Experience of the British Civil Wars, 1638–1651.
Routledge, 1992.

Chaffinge, Thomas.
The Iust Mans Memoriall
. Nathaniel Baxter, 1630.

Chandler, John. “The Country Parson's Flock: Bemerton in 1632,”
Sarum Chronicle
6 (2006).

Clarendon, Edward, Earl of.
The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England.
6 volumes. Ed. by W. Dunn Macray. Clarendon Press, 1888.

———.
His maiesties answer to the propositions presented to him at Hampton Court…by the Earle of Pembroke and others
, 1647 (WSRO 2057/F6/4).

Clifford, D. J. H.
The Diaries of Lady Anne Clifford
. Alan Sutton, 1990.

Colvin, M.M. “The South Front of Wilton House.”
Architectural Journal
cxi (1954).

Cook, Hadrian, and Tom Williamson, eds.
Water Meadows: History, Ecology and Conservation.
Windgather Press, 2007.

Cornwall, Julian.
Revolt of the Peasantry, 1549
. Routledge Kegan Paul, 1977.

Cressy, David.
England on Edge: Crisis and Revolution, 1640–1642
. Oxford University Press, 2006.

Cunnington, B. H., ed.
Records of the County of Wiltshire, Being Extracts from the Quarter Sessions Great Rolls of the Seventeenth Century
. George Simpson, 1932.

Cust, Richard.
Charles I: A Political Life
. Pearson Longman, 2005.

Davidson, H. E.
The Sword in Anglo-Saxon England.
Boydell Press, 1994.

de Caus, Isaac.
Wilton Garden.
London: Peter Stent, 1654.

Duncan-Jones, Katherine.
Sir Philip Sidney: Courtier Poet
. Hamish Hamilton, 1991.

———, ed.
Shakespeare's Sonnets.
Arden Shakespeare, 1997.

———, ed.
The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (The Old Arcadia)
. Oxford World's Classics, 1999.

Ekwall, Eilert.
Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names
. Clarendon Press, 1960.

Erickson, Amy Louise.
Women & Property in Early Modern England
. Routledge, 1993.

Firth, C. H.
The House of Lords During the Civil War.
Methuen, 1974.

Fletcher, Anthony.
The Outbreak of the English Civil War.
Edward Arnold, 1981.

Foister, Susan.
Holbein in England.
Tate Publishing, 2006.

Girouard, Mark.
Robert Smythson & the Elizabethan Country House
. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1983.

———.
The Return to Camelot: Chivalry and the English Gentleman.
New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1981.

Gordenker, Emilie E. S.
Anthony Van Dyck and the Representation of Dress in Seventeenth-Century Portraiture
. Brepols, 2001.

Hammond, Lieutenant. “Relation of a short survey of the Western Coun
ties.” In
Camden Miscellany
, xvi, Camden 3rd Series, lii, London: Royal Historical Society, 1936.

Hannay, Margaret P.
Philip's Phoenix: Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke
. Oxford University Press, 1990.

Hannay, Margaret P., Noel J. Kinnamon, and Michael Brennan.
Domestic Politics and Family Absence
. Ashgate, 2005.

Harris, John. “Variable Geometry.”
Country Life
, September 15, 1988.

Harris, John, Stephen Orgel, and Roy Strong.
The King's Arcadia: Inigo Jones and the Stuart Court
. Arts Council, 1973.

Henderson, Paula.
The Tudor House and Garden
. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2005.

Herbert, George.
George Herbert: The Complete English Works
. Ann Pasternak Slater, ed. Everyman, 1995.

Herbert, William, and Sir Benjamin Rudyerd.
Poems
(1660), 2nd ed. London 1817.

B. Herrup, Cynthia.
A House in Gross Disorder: Sex, Law and the 2nd Earl of Castlehaven
. Oxford University Press, 1999.

Hill, Christopher.
The Century of Revolution, 1603–1714
. Thomas Nelson, 1961.

Historical Manuscripts Commission.
Reports and Calendars
, several dates.

Houses of Parliament.
Petition of parliament to the King, delivered by Lord Pembroke and others; with the King's answer
, 1642 (WSRO 2057/F6/2).

Howard, Maurice.
The Early Tudor Country House: Architecture and Politics, 1490–1550
. George Philip, 1987.

Hunter, Michael.
John Aubrey and the Realm of Learning
. Science History Publications, 1975.

Hutton, Ronald.
Debates in Stuart History
. Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.

James, Susan E.
Kateryn Parr: The Making of a Queen
. Ashgate, 1999.

Jordan, W. K.
Edward VI: The Young King
. Allen and Unwin, 1968.

Kerridge, Eric, ed.
Surveys of the Manors of Philip, Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, 1631–2
. Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, 1953.

———. “The Movement of Rent 1540–1640.”
Economic History Review
, 2nd ser., VI (1953).

Klein, Lisa M. “Lady Anne Clifford as Mother and Matriarch.”
Journal of Family History
26, no. 1 (Jan. 2001): 18–38.

Larkin, James F.
Stuart Royal Proclamations, Vol II: Royal Proclamations of King Charles I, 1625–1646
. Clarendon Press, 1983.

Larkin James F., and Paul L. Hughes.
Stuart Royal Proclamations. Vol. I: Royal Proclamations of King James I, 1603–1625
. Clarendon Press, 1973.

Latham, Agnes, ed.
William Shakespeare: As You Like It
. Methuen, 1975.

Laurence, Anne.
Women in England, 1500–1760: A Social History
. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1994.

Lees-Milne, James.
The Age of Inigo Jones
. Batsford, 1953.

Lever, Tresham.
The Herberts of Wilton
. John Murray, 1967.

Lewin, C. G. “Housekeeping in Salisbury, 1640.”
Sarum Chronicle
5 (2005): 14–25.

Lockyer, Roger.
Buckingham
. Longman, 1981.

———.
James VI & I
. Longman, 1998.

Long, C. E., ed.
Richard Symonds's Diary of the Marches of the Royal Army
. Cambridge University Press, 1997.

Maclachlan, Tony.
The Civil War in Wiltshire
. Rowan Books, 1997.

Mazzola, Elizabeth.
Favorite Sons: The Politics and Poetics of the Sidney Family.
Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.

Millar, Oliver.
The Age of Charles I: Painting in England, 1620–1649
. Tate Gallery, 1972.

———.
Van Dyck in England
. National Portrait Gallery, 1982.

Montagu, Walter.
The Shepherds' Paradise
. The Malone Society, 1997.

Morrill, John.
Tudor and Stuart Britain
. Oxford University Press, 1996.

Morris, Christopher, ed.
The Journeys of Celia Fiennes
. Cresset Press, 1947.

Nichols, John.
The Progresses of Queen Elizabeth I
. John Nichols, 1823.

Nightingale, J. E.
Memorials of Wilton
. George Simpson, 1906.

Norbrook, David.
Writing the English Republic: Poetry, Rhetoric and Politics, 1627–1660
. Cambridge University Press, 1999.

———, ed.
The Penguin Book of Renaissance Verse
. Penguin, 1992.

———.
Poetry and Politics in the English Renaissance
. Oxford University Press, 2002.

Norden, John.
The Surveiors Dialogue
, 1610.

O'Callaghan, Michelle.
The “Shepheards Nation”: Jacobean Spenserians and Early Stuart Political Culture, 1612–1625
. Oxford University Press, 2000.

Ollard, Richard.
Clarendon and His Friends
. Hamish Hamilton, 1987.

Orgel, Stephen, and Roy Strong.
Inigo Jones: The Theatre of the Stuart Court
. 2 vols. University of California Press, 1973.

Panofsky, Erwin. “Et in Arcadia ego: Poussin and the Elegaic Tradition.” In
Meaning in the Visual Arts
. Doubleday 1955.

Parfitt, George.
Ben Jonson: The Complete Poems
. Penguin, 1996.

Other books

Pandora's Curse - v4 by Jack Du Brul
Deciding Tomorrow by Ericson, Renee
Maddigan's Fantasia by Margaret Mahy
The First Mountain Man by William W. Johnstone
The Last Big Job by Nick Oldham
Spurs and Heels by Heather Rainier
Treachery in Tibet by John Wilcox