Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2011
Early in 1652 the leading Independent divine John Owen, with a group of other ministers, published a plan for the reform of the Church entitled The Humble Proposals. The scheme aroused antagonism and opposition. The existence of petitions against it, one of them published by Roger Williams under the title The Fourth Paper (1652), was noted by David Masson in his Life of Milton. The protest was more intense, and went on longer, than Masson suggests. Petitions were soon followed by a number of tracts, some of them anonymous, others raising the issues in an introductory epistle or an appendix to material with a wider reference. Taken together, they clearly indicate a well-organised campaign behind the scenes.
1 Owen, John, Goodwin, Thomas, Nye, Philip, Simpson, Sidrach et al., The Humble Proposals, London 1652.Google Scholar For his invaluable assistance and for his encouragement, I wish to thank Dr Geoffrey Nuttall. I am grateful to the Rothmans University Endowment Fund for a postdoctoral fellowship and a further grant-in-aid.
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5 For Butler, see Greaves and Zaller, op. cit. For Charles Vane, see Masson, op. cit. index. For Danvers, see Greaves, R. L., ‘The tangled careers of two Stuart radicals: Henry and Robert Danvers’, in Baptist Quarterly xxix (1981), 32–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar For Goad, see , J. and Venn, J. A., Alumni Canlabrigienses, Cambridge 1922-1954, I. ii. 225Google Scholar.
6 They left New England on 10 November 1651, Rowe, V. A., Sir Henry Vane the Younger: a study in political and administrative history, London 1970, 199.Google Scholar For Clarke, see Greaves an d Zaller, op. cit.
7 For Calvert, sec ibid.; see also Terry, A. E., ‘Giles Calvert, mid-seventeenth-century English bookseller and publisher: an account of his publishing career’, unpubl. MSc diss., Columbia University 1937,Google Scholar who draws attention to the possibility that he published a number of tracts which bear no printer's name (such as some which attacked The Humble Proposals).
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19 Richard Baxter to Thomas Hill, in Nuttall, G. F., Richard Baxter, London 1965, 75Google Scholar.
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23 Severall Queries, 19.
24 Williams, R., The Hireling Ministry None of Christs, London 1652,Google Scholar dedicatory epistle, sig. A2V.
25 Commons Journals vii. 130, 137, 190.
26 , Williams, Fourth Paper, 23.Google Scholar
27 Ibid. Epistle to Reader.
28 French, J. Milton (ed.), The Life Records of John Milton, New York 1966, ii. 321;Google Scholar iii. 157, 206; v. 421.
29 , Masson, John Milton, iv. 432–3; DNB.Google Scholar
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32 DNB, as Biddle; , Rowe, Sir Henry Vane, 197–8;Google ScholarMcLachlan, H. J., Socinianism in Seventeenth-century England, Oxford 1951, 190–3;Google ScholarCommons Journals vii. 144.
33 Wolfe, D. M., Complete Prose Works of John Milton, New Haven-London 1966, iv. 1,Google Scholar introduction 89.
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35 Baxter, Richard, Reliquiae Baxterianae, ed. Sylvester, M., London 1696, I. i. 75.Google Scholar
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38 Ibid. 27, Epistle to Reader.
39 Owen, ‘Conspiracy’, passim.
40 , McLachlan, Socinianism 234–9;Google ScholarMassachusetts Historical Society Collections, III. i. 35-7.
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45 ‘The Publishers of the First’ also presented a tract with the same title ‘to the Lord Protector and the Parliament’, but this was in 1654 and was answered by the Quakers and by John Goodwin: apart from its origins, it is another story, or at least (since several of the dramatis personal are the same) another instalment, beginning with the Nominated Parliament and its collapse, continuing with the conference of ministers called to define the ‘Fundamentals of Religion’ and ending with the prosecution of the Quaker James Nayler for blasphemy.
46 Commons Journals vii. 190.
47 Owen, John, A Sermon preached to the Parliament, Oxford 1652, 36.Google Scholar
48 John Durie to Richard Baxter, 29 Oct. 1652, in Nuttall, G. F., ‘Presbyterians and Independents: some movements for unity 300 years ago’, Presbyterian Historical Society Journal X (1952), 7Google Scholar.
49 White, B. R., ‘William Erbery (1604-1654) and the Baptists’, Baptist Quarterly xxiii (1969-1970), 116.Google Scholar
50 Commons Journals vii. 259.