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Ronald Hutton
begins his account of the Restoration, The Restoration: a
Political and Religious History of England and Wales (Clarendon;
Oxford, 1985) by contrasting the attention historians had paid
to the English Civil War with the relatively few monographs devoted
to the subsequent phase of history: in his words, 'the history
of the English Revolution now reads like a marvellous story with
the last chapter missing'.(1)
The Civil War has continued to make and break academic reputations,
but it is striking how much things have changed since Hutton
wrote. Historians (Richard Greaves, Tim Harris, Jonathan Scott
among many) have gradually remade what the 'Restoration' can
mean. So the Restoration Keeble comes to is one that has recently
been reworked and reconsidered. However, Keebles study
takes a more specific focus than most recent explorations, being
part of a series which studies decades: it sits between John
Spurrs excellent culturally-oriented study of the subsequent
decade [England in the 1670s, published 2000] and Ann
Hughess forthcoming version of the 1650s. The format of
a study of a decade makes one realise once again that the 1660s
per se though perhaps slightly less so than the
1670s remain in some ways the partly-charted terrain that
Hutton saw. Keeble reminds us that '[n]either those who relinquished
nor those who gained power in 1660 knew what had been won and
lost' or for how long. Arguing that '[n]o previous decade
had been so determined to have its voice heard by subsequent
decades', his avowed aim is 'to listen' (pp. 2, 4). What he hears
is fascinating.
Keebles task is to make sense of a decade in which went
from the (for some) grand moment of the Restoration to the stalled
culture of the close of the decade. His study ends, perforce,
just before the beginning of experiments with licensing Nonconformists
in 1672. Taking this decade alone does make one realise that,
for all the new work on the Restoration, it is itself still often
characterised as an interlude of plague, fire and fine theatre
or more often a prologue in the drama of a new
kind of political and civic modernity. Although much of what,
culturally, seems to define the 1660s has powerful connections
to the 1650s, it still seems as though what we think of
as 'Restoration' culture took its rise from that event. So while
the Restoration can hardly now be characterised as an absent
chapter, it is the location of some enduring myths that an examination
of a decade brings under useful scrutiny. As a scholar of John
Bunyan and Lucy Hutchinson, Keeble is admirably placed to link
the Restoration to the struggles of the Civil War and Protectorate
from the point of view of those who felt that 1660 was not a
marvellous last chapter, but a catastrophe much in need of reversal.
As this book makes clear, the dissatisfied, even at the moment
of Restoration, were numerous. Keebles approach to the
assumption of scholars and students about the Restoration is
identifiable in the choice of topics covered; the pointed use
of a wealth of contemporary comment, and the nature of his sources.
With the careful attention to language that characterises the
study, Keeble spends some time illuminating the term 'Restoration'
itself. He notes that while many represented Charles as welcomed
'an unanimous consent' the rejoicing was neither wholly spontaneous
nor unanimous. As he reminds us, the very term Restoration
was carefully chosen and nurtured. Keebles examination
of the word 'restoration' in contemporary usage makes it admirably
clear that that term is, and was for contemporaries, far from
describing the decade. 'Upon this Kings most happy Restoration,
there was seen from all parts his loyal Subject contending how
to express their Gratitude to Heaven for its glorious Favour,
and the Kings no less than miraculous Return': thus Keeble
quotes Sir Richard Bulstrode on Charles IIs 'return' in
1660. Even amongst those whom Keeble presents as evidently in
favour we might find some tension at least. One commentators
suggestion that the people 'exhausted themselves in festivals
and rejoicings for his return' may be a little more pointed than
it seems: 'exhausted' is not exactly reinvigorated (p. 46). John
Milton and Edmund Ludlow saw calling Charles to England as choosing
'a captain back for Egypt' (p. 48). On the other side,
Clarendon recognised both the fragility and the importance of
the Restoration, asserting 'This sudden Revolution'
ought to be called 'by the name of the Restauration'.
As Keeble helpfully reminds us, Clarendon was absolutely alive
to the importance of how the event was to be understood
the future depended on it.
In a triumph of winners history, Restoration became the
standard term which tended to bring with it not exactly royalist
sympathies but certain assumptions about the fairly widespread
acceptance of, and even rejoicing at, the event. Indeed, Keebles
must be one of the few studies of the Restoration to quote so
much and so well from the variously dispossessed and annoyed,
and so comparatively little from the theatre. Keebles
witnesses, in general, have complex feelings about the return
of the Stuarts and it is very welcome that Keebles attention
is not overwhelmed by the evidential bias produced by the 'success'
of the event. One of his main informants in a book full of perfectly
chosen witness statements is Lucy Hutchinson and she called it
a 'change'. Indeed, in the 1660s this acid observer appropriated
the term 'Restoration' for her husbands attempt to achieve
the peoples liberties in the Civil Wars. Of the Colonels
military involvement she wrote 'Such killing weapons too he wore
/ Not to destroy but to restore'.(2)
If there was one 'change' then there might well be others. Through
this book Keeble follows the course of those who while not necessarily
involved in anything remotely like a plot, had reason to dislike
the Restoration and to hope for change. He illuminates clearly
why, in terms of facts and perceptions, many feared it
often allowing them to use their own words to make the point.
If 'Restoration' as a word troubled contemporaries, it was precisely
because of the way that word named the relationship of past and
present. As a way to describe the meanings of 1660 and after
for contemporaries, 'Restoration' can, perhaps, be paired with
'oblivion'; for what was at stake in both words was what was
to be remembered, what forgotten and in what form. The Act of
Oblivion notwithstanding, the debates of the war were to continue
in new forms. Ostensibly writing about her own situation, mourning
the death of her husband Colonel John Hutchinson, Lucy Hutchinson
wrote of the condition and treatment of mourning widows:
commonly all objects are removed out of their view, which may
with other remembrance renew the grief; and in time these remedies
succeed, when oblivions curtain is by degrees drawn over
the dead face, and things less lovely are liked, while they are
not viewed together with that which was most excellent. But I
that am under a command not to grieve at the common rate of desolate
women. (3)
Rather than 'grieve at the common rate of desolate woman' and
permit herself the degraded consolations of replacement and ultimately
'oblivion', Lucy Hutchinson commits herself to a project of memory
and memorial. The 'life' of her husband that this comment precedes
is full, detailed, self-justifying but, above all, it represents
an absolute refusal to go along with the idea of 'Restoration'
and all the forgetting that would need to accompany it. For Keeble,
Lucy Hutchinson is one of the most articulate voices of those
who would not go along with the Restoration, would insist on
building a future out of remembering rather than forgetting.
As David Loewenstein points out, Milton was not alone in attaching
himself grimly to memory.(4)
Even those who were not stubbornly refusing oblivion could, and
did, remember. In 1667 Keeble reminds us, Samuel Pepys saw the
Stuarts as ' this family', 'doing all that silly men can do to
make themselves unable to support their Kingdom' (quoted on p.167).(5)
Pepys imagined a return of Commonwealth, writing 'people will
remember better things were done, and better managed' and 'with
much less charge, under a commonwealth than they have been under
this king.' In this study there does not seem to be a Catholic
voice of the same pungency and intensity as Hutchinson and Pepys,
but Keeble uses his witnesses very well to make the points they
want to make themselves things could, some felt should,
have been otherwise.
Late modern historians and to a lesser extent literary scholars
writing on the English Civil War have argued endlessly over terminology.
Was what happened in the period 1641-60 a 'revolution' (and if
so what kind)? Was it a 'rebellion'? Was it in any case a national
manifestation of European unrest? Was it sparked by religious
or political 'causes'? Did it have 'causes', as such? Did the
Civil War express 'conflicts' that fissured English society throughout
the early seventeenth century, or blow up suddenly because of
the incursion of the crown? Such debates remain gloriously unresolved.
Yet, given that the term 'Restoration' was a bugbear in 1660,
whatever happened in 1660 has no comparable terminological scrum
amongst historians now: the 'R word' is still quite often used
as if it describes rather than shapes an event. The terminological
calm, however, coexists with much historical work on the substantially
unresolved political situation, an increasingly intense debate
amongst historians about the status and nature of religious and
political activity in the period 1660-90, and increasing attention
to the cultural expression of the crises of the period by literary
scholars.
In terms of the sources used and the topics it addresses England
in the 1660s is sharply aware of the debates about the nature
of the 'Restoration'. Alongside 'Monarchy Restored', 'the Cavalier
Settlement', 'The Act of Oblivion' Keeble calls our attention
to 'The Experience of Persecution', 'Nonconformist Culture',
'Radicals, Republicans and Plotters', and some of the new literary
political modes 'Porno-Politics'. Thus, England in
the 1660s certainly uses and registers the last two decades
of scholarship reconsidering England after the Restoration. Readers
might have been given more explicit information about the state
of these debates in history and literary studies. It would also
be interesting to know explicitly where Keeble thinks the 1660s
and the troubled term 'Restoration' itself do or do not fit in
to the current narratives of the second half of the century (and,
come to that, the first). An overview of the debates would have
been welcome and useful to readers, too, in a study in a series
of this kind.
Keeble certainly does succeed in his aims. He has crafted the
narrative to give us the voices of a very full range of witnesses
men and women, royalists, nonconformists, politicians,
diarists, poets. Around these contradictory voices Keeble builds
up a rich picture of the crises of the decade. England in
the 1660s will illuminate a still strangely obscure decade
for both students and scholars.
April 2003
Notes
1. Ronald Hutton, The Restoration:
a Political and Religious History of England and Wales, 1658-1667
(Clarendon; Oxford, 1985), p.1
2. Lucy Hutchinson 'Upon two
pictures', in David Norbrook, 'Lucy Hutchinsons 'Elegies'
and the situation of the Republican woman writer' English
Language Review, 27: 3 (1997), 468-520, on p.494.
3. Lucy Hutchinson, 'To My
Children', in Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson
ed N.H.Keeble (Dent; London, 1995), p.16.
4. David Loewenstein, Representing
Revolution in Milton and His Contemporaries (Cambridge University
Press; Cambridge, 2001).
5.The Diary of Samuel Pepys.
Volume 8: 1667, ed. Robert Latham and William Matthews (Bell
and Hyman; London, 1971), p. 377. |