On 28 January 1648
Thomas Edwards (c.1599–1648), Presbyterian controversialist
and 'true hammer of the heretics', died in exile at Amsterdam. The
previous month Edwards had drawn up his will, claiming he had 'dealt
faithfully, and with a good conscience, in all that I have preached
or written, against the late sects and errors which have risen and
sprung up in England' (pp. 1, 2). For most modern scholars
Edwards's reputation rests largely upon a single work published
in three parts: Gangraena (London, printed for Ralph
Smith at the sign of the Bible in Cornhill near the Royal Exchange,
1646). Part one, 'A Catalogue and Discovery of many of the Errours,
Heresies, Blasphemies and pernicious Practices of the Sectaries
of this time, vented and acted in England in these four last years',
was issued in three broadly distinct editions; part two, 'A fresh
and further Discovery...' was published in two editions with separate
printings; and part three, 'A new and higher Discovery...' published
in one version.
Probably born in London of a modest family, Edwards matriculated
at Queens' College, Cambridge in 1618, graduating BA in 1622, proceeding
MA in 1625, and ordained deacon in January 1626. Queens' was then
renowned for its puritan reputation and, as Hughes points out, 'contacts
formed at university were a starting point for the creation of Puritan
networks'. Indeed, Edwards's near contemporaries at other colleges
would include 'numerous future allies and opponents' (pp. 24, 25).
Notes taken at sermons preached from Cambridge pulpits indicate
Edwards offered 'a conventional if awkward Calvinist position on
the horrors of the fall, and the deceptions of Satan' (p. 25). An
intemperate sermon in St Andrew's church, however, resulted in proceedings
before the Vice-Chancellor's Court and an order on 31 March 1628
that Edwards preach a sermon of recantation. This knack for inflaming
passions was to prove characteristic of his entire career and Edwards
emerged as 'an early and forthright opponent of liberty of conscience
for gathered congregations' (p. 34), arguing against even limited
toleration:
[It] will not onely breede Divisions and Schismes,
disturbing the peace and quiet of Churches and Townes ... but
will undoubtedly cause much disturbance, discontent and divisions
... (1)
Edwards's second book Antapologia, or a Full Answer to the Apologeticall
Narration (1644) was a three-hundred-page response to the thirty-page
justification of their congregational way by the leading 'Independents'
of the Westminster Assembly. Hughes believes that Edwards wrote
from 'a sense of bitter polarization, from intense anxiety about
religious radicalism and fear of the growing power of Independents'
(pp. 42, 43). Lacking a sense of proportion, this attack on Independent
church government brought Edwards to national prominence. In addition,
Hughes argues, it facilitated the creation of networks 'vital to
the construction of Gangraena' as men in London and the provinces,
alarmed at the influence of 'Independents', began supplying him
with material he would put to use in what Hughes calls 'a massive
and notorious assault on religious liberty' and its consequences
(pp. 50, 55).
Hughes correctly regards Gangraena as 'a disorganized text with
complex or even contradictory messages and approaches' (p. 55).
Its title derives from a scriptural verse that had become synonymous
with the struggle against doctrinal error: 'And their word will
eat as doth a canker [margin or gangrene]' (2 Timothy 2:17). As
Hughes demonstrates, the book can be placed in a long line of anti-heretical
writing: a heresiological tradition beginning with Paul –
even if modern biblical scholarship doubts his authorship of the
epistles to Timothy – and including church fathers such as
Augustine and Theodoret, as well as major figures of the sixteenth-century
Reformation like Luther, Zwingli and Calvin. Of course 'there are
dangers in taking heresiology ... as an accurate guide to what it
denounces' (p. 73). The great manuscript discoveries of the twentieth
century which revolutionised Manichaean studies have led to a fundamental
reappraisal of the accuracy of Augustine 'On the Manichaean heresy'.
Similarly, it is only through extensive quotation in Calvin's works
that we are familiar with the ex-priest Anthony Pocquet's ideas;
if this libertine's writings were found we would doubtless question
Calvin's judgment that they amounted to goat dung. Indeed the difficulties
with heresiography as a genre are manifold: the sources from which
many were constructed have not survived or are only partly extant,
making it impossible or tricky to establish authenticity; their
purpose was not accurately to report errors – usually represented
as inversions of truths – but to extirpate them; compilers
could be alarmist and self-serving; they attached labels (sometimes
borrowed from their predecessors) to facilitate categorisation,
thereby providing loosely connected individuals with a sectarian
identity and genealogy that may have deliberately blurred or ignored
subtle doctrinal distinctions. The problems with heresiography in
general are also the problems with Gangraena in particular. Yet
this was 'never a finished product', but a text 'ever in the making',
by an author 'almost overwhelmed by events' who early on decided
against complete coverage (pp. 64, 65).
Edwards presented himself as 'cautious and meticulous, interrogating
informants if they 'were ear and eye witnesses' and checking circumstantial
evidence (p. 88). His method was simply to list error, heresy, blasphemy
and schism indiscriminately; and his refutations were brief (pp.
93, 94). Even so, as Hughes observes, he 'lacked (or was unable
to exercise) the basic skills of the effective heresiographer –
to précis, classify, and sectarianize' (p. 98). The question
is whether this 'poor' or 'idiosyncratic' heresiographer can be
trusted to reflect what people really thought (p. 102).
Among modern scholars Christopher Hill is the 'most influential'
of those who have stressed Gangraena's value as a source. According
to Hill, who used it notably for The World Turned Upside Down (1972)
and Milton and the English Revolution (1977), it is 'well
documented and seems to stand up quite well to examination'
(p. 5). Other historians of radical religion have 'accepted and
used Gangraena as a source, albeit with some qualifications' (p.
5). Murray Tolmie relied on it for his pioneering The Triumph of
the Saints. The Separate Churches of London 1616–1649 (Cambridge,
1977), while Gerald Aylmer regarded it as an extraordinary compendium
and the fullest available catalogue of the sects and their beliefs.
As Hughes says, 'the sheer bulk of the work and its self-presentation
as a truthful "catalogue" has often had a more seductive
effect upon historians than it had on many contemporaries' (p. 6).
Though other assessments have been more cautious they have not gone
far enough to satisfy the extreme sceptics. For The Rise of the
New Model Army (Cambridge, 1979) Mark Kishlansky lumped Edwards
with Richard Baxter and the religious disputants, arguing that these
men tended to 'polarize and exaggerate' the situations
they observed (p. 7). Consequently he never cited Gangraena. Likewise,
J. Colin Davis maintained that using Gangraena for 'evidence of
the reality of sectarian development' was comparable to relying
on Joseph McCarthy for 'sound, objective opinions' about American
communist activities in his day (pp. 7–8). Gangraena's trustworthiness
has therefore, rightly or wrongly, played a considerable part in
wider debates such as the extent of radicalism in the 1640s and
the nature of the English revolution.
Ann Hughes's book is the first comprehensive study of Gangraena
and its 'vainglorious, controversial, and ultimately disappointed
author' (p. 2). Her aim has been to locate Gangraena in 'as many
contexts as possible', ranging from 'cultural analysis to discussions
of high politics, drawing on insights from literary criticism, the
history of the book, and studies of print culture as well as local,
political, and religious history' (p. 3). She discusses Gangraena's
'narrative strategies and generic affiliations', explores Edwards's
sources and attempts to unravel his connections, arguing that his
work was 'a product of, and a major contribution to, a broad campaign
for Presbyterian reformation, and against schism and heresy' (p.
3). Furthermore, Hughes insists that while the modern debate about
Gangraena has focused on its 'usefulness as evidence', establishing
its status as a source has not been her 'main purpose' (p. 8). Even
so, she concedes that 'at the most fundamental level a study of
Gangraena is concerned with truth, the status of evidence, and the
validity of arguments' (p. 9).
There is much in this admirably researched book to interest a variety
of readers. Hughes provides an account of Edwards's early career,
the making of him as a Presbyterian, his first polemical works and
the background to Gangraena – which she suggests was 'a product
of a debate that never was, the debate over Antapologia' (p. 53).
There follows an excellent chapter on 'Gangraena as Heresiography'
which begins with an outline of Gangraena's structure, though 'a
concise summary risks giving the volumes a logic and coherence that
Edwards never provided' (p. 55). This chapter also includes a lively
section on heresiological traditions as well as a discussion of
Edwards's research methods (such as they were), his central themes
(that 'the godly faced the most serious crisis since the Reformation'
(p. 105)), and main polemical purpose ('to implicate the mainstream
Independents in the spread of religious chaos' (p. 107)). Chapter
3, 'Like a Universal Leprosie Over-spread this Whole Kingdom', examines
Gangraena's relationship with London and the provinces. It 'was,
and could only have been, a Londoner's book' (p.130), and in her
sketch of City life Hughes provides several significant contexts:
the lecturing scene; the networks of London's puritan clergy which
were 'by no means exclusively clerical but involved a range of laymen,
of respected if rarely elevated social status' (p. 142); booksellers'
contacts and bookshop debates; and how Edwards's networks were 'mobilized
to provide material for Gangraena' (p. 151). Hughes calculates that
at least 40 percent of the specific stories in Gangraena concern
London and believes that it 'offers a compelling general picture
of the religious (and political) culture of London' in the 1640s
(p. 169) – even if Edwards's was 'a very partial view' (p.
183). As for the provinces, here Edwards's focus was on 'those parts
of the country where parliament's armies held sway' and thus where
parliament could be 'held responsible for the failures of orthodox
reformation' (p. 187). A useful table indicates that Kent, Essex,
Norfolk and Suffolk were better represented in Gangraena than any
other area, while there is nothing on Nottinghamshire (p. 188).
Hughes concludes her survey of religious developments in provincial
England by suggesting that Edwards did not exaggerate the extent
of religious unorthodoxy: many of his local stories 'had some basis
in "actual" provincial anxieties, incidents and disputes'
even though Gangraena is 'selective and misleading' (p. 213).
Chapter 4, 'Books Lately Printed' concerns 'Gangraena
and the World of Print'. It shows how Gangraena was
produced, considers the broadly distinct editions of each part and
summarises the licencing procedure. Hughes claims that it 'drew
extensively on this deeply partisan world of print' (p. 241). Moreover,
she demonstrates the influence of treatises by William Prynne and
Thomas Gataker, noting Edwards's technique of selectively quoting
rather than misquoting radical authors such as John Lilburne, John
Saltmarsh and Thomas Collier. No doubt Edwards also subjected Laurence
Clarkson's Pilgrimage of Saints to the same treatment, though this
is impossible to verify as no copies have survived. This, then,
was a basic principle of heresiography: 'to isolate the most damning
and dangerous passages.' (p. 248)
Understandably, Gangraena generated several 'outraged printed responses',
especially from those named by Edwards (p. 250). His respondents
adopted 'various strategies of justification and apology' (p. 251),
some marginalising its damaging content, others confronting him
directly both in person and print. And when his stories were challenged,
Edwards 'was driven to ever more elaborate, exhaustive, and exhausting
displays of his own evidence' (p. 265). Adopting the modern scholarly
approach that readers 'are not simply passive recipients of a meaning
that is clearly contained within a text' (p. 276), Hughes suggests
that Gangraena was 'only possible as a series of collaborations'
between Edwards and his informants, and between author and readers
(p. 279). Less convincing in this context is the application of
De Certeau's notion that 'Every story is a travel story' and that
Gangraena's readers were embarked on a journey (pp. 123–24,
281). Books were certainly material objects, typography was important
and illustrations could enhance meaning, though it is noteworthy
that unlike broadsheets such as A Discovery of the most Dangerovs
and damnable tenets that have been spread within this few yeares
(1647) and some anti-Royalist pamphlets, Gangraena contains neither
engravings nor woodcuts. This suggests that Edwards's intended audience
was educated and fully literate, which is borne out by Hughes's
analysis of how Gangraena was purchased, and who owned and annotated
it.
Print was a public medium and it could be used to energise political
groups. Though Edwards was not 'an organizational leader of London
Presbyterianism' (p. 318) Gangraena had angered the ranks of the
New Model Army, 'thereby provoking the fatal confrontation with
the Presbyterians in 1646–7' (p. 319). Even so, Hughes acknowledges
that taking Gangraena as her focus 'inevitably risks crediting it
with too great an influence on contemporary events' (p. 321). Instead
she draws on earlier work by Valerie Pearl and Michael Mahony, as
well as a recent study by Elliott Vernon to provide a nuanced, complex
and persuasive study of Presbyterians far removed from the familiar
caricature: inflexible, bigoted, paranoid, distasteful (though admittedly
some were all of these). For Hughes, Gangraena 'did not stand alone,
but was the most startling and notorious example of a broader Presbyterian
polemical campaign' (p. 401). She concludes, perhaps inevitably,
with a now obligatory discussion of the 'public sphere' before assessing
Edwards's reputation and Gangraena's afterlife, declaring that 'Edwards is one of many examples of how lively, populist, dynamic,
and seductive prose can serve a bad cause' (p. 442).
Gangraena and the Struggle for the English Revolution is a very
good book. Moderate in tone and often persuasive, it is an important
contribution to on-going scholarly debates. Nonetheless, there are
ways in which it could have been better. Excluding the introduction
and conclusion, it consists of four chapters the shortest of which
is 75 pages, the longest 98 pages. Though these are broken down
into sections, chapter subheadings are not indicated in the contents
and readers may wonder why there were not smaller chapters instead.
In addition, readers are sometimes referred to fuller discussions
elsewhere in the text, but without specific page numbers (p. 43
n. 109, p. 45 n. 114, p. 57 n. 3, p. 118 n. 197, p. 126 n. 220).
At times the structure necessitates repetition and one wonders how
much could have been avoided. Hence we are told on several occasions
the same notorious stories; of Captain Beaumont's soldiers pissing
in a font in Yakesley, Huntingdonshire and afterwards baptising
a horse (pp. 60, 120, 166, 215–16, 273, 309); of Anabaptists
dressing up a cat like a child to be baptised (pp. 126, 180, 309);
and of John Goodwin playing at bowls on the day of thanksgiving
for the victory at Naseby (pp. 90, 267–68, 310, 439). Indeed,
Hughes fears that she has been 'infected' with Edwards's incapacity
for organising his material and hopes her readers will be 'more
tolerant' than many of Edwards's of her 'often necessary repetitions'
(p. vi). There is of course more than one way in which this could
have been written but the result here appears to be an echo of Gangraena.
Like its progenitor, readers need a number of tools to navigate
their way through the text. Despite places where Hughes's 'unwieldy
manuscript' (p vii) appears to have been cut, the published version
is still too long – not that there is anything wrong with
big books. But had Gangraena and the Struggle for the English
Revolution been condensed and the material organised differently
it would have become more accessible to non-specialist readers.
As all researchers are only too well aware, there is a real problem
of what evidence does and does not say – and how far one can
push it to make a point. The question of Edwards's 'accuracy' and
Hughes's attempt to check his 'facts' brought her 'face to face
with the limitations of the historian's craft where certainty can
never be achieved' (p. 435). She remains convinced that 'he made
nothing up, but so much cannot be checked that this must remain
a provisional and contestable judgement' (p. 435). But ultimately
this book evades, defers or postpones the issue of 'accuracy' –
which Hughes regards as liberating for her analysis (pp. 10, 170–71,
213, 270–71, 434–6). Then there is the matter of whether
reading Gangraena helps or hinders the historian. Has it warped
our view of the past and would our histories improve if no copies
had survived? After all, Edwards's version of events has so profoundly
influenced modern discussions that 'it is almost impossible now
to develop a view of London, not affected (or tainted?) by the prominence
of Gangraena as a source' (p. 131). Gangraena has been available
in facsimile since 1977 and can now be downloaded from Early English
Books Online. While Hughes has convincingly shown that a critical
edition is unnecessary, a re-issue of Gangraena with modern typeface,
coherent pagination and index is still desirable. If this were ever
produced it would complement Gangraena and the Struggle for the
English Revolution. Even without this readers can still appreciate
what a remarkable job Hughes has done in untangling and contextualising
the original text.
November 2005
Notes
1. T. Edwards, Reasons
Against the Independent Government of Particular Congregations (1641),
p. 26, quoted in Hughes, Gangraena, p. 39).
The author would like to thank Dr Hessayon for his thorough and perceptive review. |