Bartholomew Fair (1614) is, with the exception of the masques, Jonson’s only play that was dedicated to James I. It was performed at court on 1 November 1614, one day after its premiere at the Hope Theatre, and its proximity to James’ political programme has long been recognised. Jonson had returned to the Church of England in c. 1610 and evidently abandoned the oppositional stance that still informed Sejanus His Fall. Bartholomew Fair, with its conclusion that gestures towards the resolution of sectarian conflict and the integration of Puritans into society at large, has accordingly been read as an attempt to envision religious and social reconciliation.Footnote 1 Indeed, Jonson’s play captures and propagates with remarkable faithfulness the ideology of conformity which Elizabethan political and ecclesiastical theorists had developed in the previous century in order to defuse religious conflict and which was also propagated by King James and other theorists of church government in the early seventeenth century.
However, this chapter aims to highlight the coercive aspects of this ideology of conformity as it is reproduced in Bartholomew Fair and argues that its rhetoric of moderation and inclusivity is more problematic than previous critics of the play have recognised. That is to say, the play’s representation of outward conformity is also legible in terms of King James’ authoritarian claim to rule over spiritual as well as secular matters, which Jonson ostensibly endorses. In addition, I argue that Bartholomew Fair is concerned not only with Puritan dissent, the predominant focus of previous criticism on the play, but also with questions concerning recusancy that deeply divided England’s Catholic communities in the early seventeenth century.
The first part of this chapter makes a case that the play’s belittlement of religious persecution is related to the controversy surrounding the Oath of Allegiance, James’ attempt to secure the loyalty of his Catholic subjects. In its historical context, Jonson’s deflation of the claims to martyrdom that are voiced by several characters in the play is therefore not simply a critique of the sectarian mindset; it can also be understood as an attempt to undermine the discourses of martyrdom that legitimised Catholic resistance to the Oath of Allegiance. Next, I address the Jacobean ideology of conformity more generally, particularly its theological foundations in the notion of Christian liberty in things indifferent, that is, aspects of religious doctrine and ritual that were considered irrelevant for one’s salvation. The notion of Christian liberty has hardly received any attention in scholarship on Bartholomew Fair. However, this chapter aims to demonstrate the fundamental importance of Christian liberty for the religious and literary politics of the play, from the Puritan Zeal-of-the-Land Busy’s casuistic investigation of whether it is lawful to visit the fair to the legitimacy of the theatre itself.
In the last section of this chapter, I will discuss Busy’s conversion, which, significantly, occurs during the performance of a puppet play. Arguably, the conversion is not a sudden change of heart, the consequence of Puppet Dionysius’ superior skills in disputation, but the result of a long-term process. It is the constant exposure of the play’s Puritan characters to the idolatrous spectacle of the fair and the community of ‘worldlings’ that gradually wears down their resistance and leads to their integration into society at large. In fact, Busy’s warnings against the dangers of pollution and contamination at the fair with its seductive entertainments frequently highlight the parallels between the period’s anti-Nicodemite and anti-theatrical discourses. For many Puritans, the anti-Nicodemite imperative was not restricted to refraining from or protesting against idolatrous worship. They perceived idolatry in a whole range of social and cultural activities and effectively propagated, as Karl Gunther points out, an anti-Nicodemite ‘way of life’.Footnote 2 The Puritan critique of socialising with sinful worldings, failing to display the requisite zeal for the advancement of the Gospel, or indulging in ungodly pastimes like the theatre was thus often underwritten by the same anti-Nicodemite arguments that were advanced against participation in idolatrous worship.
Importantly, Busy’s concerns that outward pollution might subvert inward purity have to be taken seriously. They cannot simply be relegated to the province of Puritan spleen, but also loomed large in Catholic debates on conformity and recusancy. It is against the backdrop of such debates on conformity that I will finally discuss Jonson’s reflections on the theatre as a controversial thing indifferent, its legitimacy in a Christian commonwealth, and its transformative effects on its spectators. Hence, even though Bartholomew Fair may seem to touch on concrete matters of church government only cursorily, it nonetheless offers a rich exploration of early modern anti-Nicodemite habits of thought. This chapter will therefore revisit many of the arguments made about toleration, persecution, and dissimulation throughout this book and point to the larger implications of the issue of religious dissimulation for early modern culture in general and the theatre in particular.
The End of Martyrdom
In his supra-confessional foreign policy as well as his professed rejection of religious violence, James I liked to style himself as a King who transcended narrow sectarianism.Footnote 3 Even before ascending to the English throne, James was at pains to project an image of himself as a lenient and merciful ruler. Prior to Elizabeth’s death, he assured Robert Cecil that ‘I will never allow in my conscience that the blood of any man shall be shed for diversity of opinions in religion’ and that ‘I did ever hold persecution as one of the infallible notes of a false church’.Footnote 4 In his address to parliament in 1610, he confessed once more that ‘I neuer found, that blood and too much seueritie did good in matters of Religion’ and proclaimed his ‘sure rule in Diuinitie’, namely, ‘that God neuer loues to plant his Church by violence and bloodshed’.Footnote 5 Indeed, he saw his power as ‘ordeined by God Ad aedificationem, non ad destructionem [2 Cor. 13:10]’Footnote 6 – to edify, not to destroy. Jonson would likely have welcomed James’ rejection of violent persecution and later described the ideal prince in similar fashion as someone whose ‘punishments are rather to correct than to destroy’.Footnote 7 In the happy resolution of Bartholomew Fair (5.6.93–4),Footnote 8 the assiduous justice Adam Overdo likewise cites 2 Cor. 13:10 as a profession of the Pauline ‘rejection of judicial authority in favour of Christian humility’.Footnote 9
Rather than presenting a fully developed main plot, Jonson’s comedy has as its main subject a rambunctious day at the fair and the many unlikely encounters which the fairground enables between a rich variety of characters and social milieus. However, despite the play’s explicit satire of its Puritan characters, who are scandalised by the abuses of the fair, religious conflict remains remarkably tame throughout. Other than in Sir Thomas More or The Jew of Malta, for instance, murderous religious violence is ostensibly banished to the past in Bartholomew Fair and merely invoked in historical and allegorical allusions. A case in point is the play’s subplot revolving around Grace Wellborn, who is courted by several young men and whose name evidently carries allegorical connotations. When Quarlous and Winwife draw swords in their competition to win her favour, Grace declares: ‘Gentlemen, this is no way that you take: you do but breed one another trouble and offence, and give me no contentment at all. I am no she that affects to be quarrelled for, or have my name or fortune made the question of men’s swords’ (4.3.1–4).Footnote 10 As John Creaser notes in his edition of the play,Footnote 11 Grace’s censure of her duelling suitors is in line with James’ campaign against duelling. However, it also echoes Erasmus’ rejection of religious controversy as fruitless fencing in De libero arbitrio,Footnote 12 which Jonson cites approvingly in Discoveries: ‘Such controversies, or disputations, carried with more labour than profit, are odious, where most times the truth is lost in the midst, or left untouched. And the fruit of their fight is that they spit one upon another, and are both defiled. These fencers in religion I like not’.Footnote 13 Grace’s attempt to exert a moderating influence on her competing suitors can accordingly be read as an Erasmian critique of religious conflict.
It certainly helps that Grace turns out to be very amenable. When Winwife finally wins his wife, Grace complies without resistance: ‘I desire to put it to no danger of protestation’ (5.2.31).Footnote 14 Her behaviour thus stands in notable contrast with that of the Puritans, who were accused of putting everything into ‘danger of protestation’. In return, Grace is lenient towards her initial suitor, Bartholomew Cokes. Asking his servant Wasp about Grace’s whereabouts, Cokes does not seem to be bothered too much by his loss: ‘Did you see Mistress Grace? – it’s no matter neither, now I think on’t; tell me anon’ (5.4.88–9).Footnote 15 Winwife ironically comments: ‘A great deal of love and care he expresses’ (5.4.90).Footnote 16 Grace, however, once again takes the matter to a political level in what sounds like an inversion of King Lear’s test of loyalty: ‘Alas! Would you have him to express more than he has? That were tyranny’ (5.4.91–2).Footnote 17 Grace thus reasserts the privilege of silence, which had been reduced to shambles in Jonson’s earlier play Sejanus His Fall.
As the case of Grace Wellborn suggests, the scandals which Jonson dissects with such fervour in Sejanus have mostly lost their sting in the comedic register of Bartholomew Fair. In fact, Jonson’s play can be read as a systematic trivialisation of sectarian conflict. At the fair, Leatherhead’s repertoire of puppet shows trivialises polemically charged subjects such as the destruction of Jerusalem, which was customarily involved in anti-Puritan polemics, and the Gunpowder Plot (5.1.6–10).Footnote 18 Judging by the rude travesty of Marlowe’s Hero and Leander in act 5, they may not have been terribly serious pieces of theatre either. Espionage, which is so central to the moral and political outrage of Sejanus His Fall, is likewise ridiculed in Overdo’s dismal attempts to spy out ‘enormities’ at the fair. By parodying the motif of the magistrate in disguise and turning him into a spectacularly inept detective, Jonson also largely bids farewell to a notion of theatricality that flaunts the theatre’s ability to grant privileged access to the inwardness of dissenters. Admittedly, this impulse is not entirely absent insofar as the convention of the stage Puritan is predicated on the exposure of Puritan hypocrisy. Unlike Marlowe, however, Jonson envisages the reintegration of Puritans into society not as dangerously misguided tolerance but as a triumph of conformity.
This is not to say that the spectre of religious violence is entirely absent from Bartholomew Fair. The St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre of 1572, which shares its name with the fair, is repeatedly invoked in the play. When the irascible Wasp at one point attacks the disguised justice Overdo, the latter replies: ‘Hold thy hand, child of wrath and heir of anger, make it not Childermas day in thy fury, or the feast of the French Barthol’mew, parent of the Massacre!’ (2.6.115–19).Footnote 19 To be sure, the allusions to the Biblical Massacre of the Innocents and the St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre are absurdly disproportional to Overdo’s well-deserved beating. As Kristen Poole puts it, ‘[i]n the Jacobean fair, as in the Jacobean state, it is pigs, not Protestants, that get roasted’.Footnote 20 However, Bartholomew Cokes’ own evocation of martyrdom, even though equally inappropriate, hits closer to home. When he is thoroughly relieved by the thieves of the fair, he complains: ‘an ever any Barthol’mew had that luck in’t that I have had, I’ll be martyred for him, and in Smithfield, too’ (4.2.57–8).Footnote 21 Smithfield, the location of the fair, was indeed a site of execution for Protestant martyrs during the Marian persecution, but also in the much more recent past. The anti-Trinitarians Bartholomew Legate and Edward Wightman were burned at the stake in Smithfield on 18 March and 11 April 1612, respectively. Beforehand, the King himself had, as the Whig narrative goes, ‘struggled valiantly to convince Legate of his errors’,Footnote 22 but to no avail. James was eager to see Legate condemned and burned under the statute De heretico comburendo,Footnote 23 despite the statute’s controversial legality.Footnote 24 Legate’s namesake in the play, Bartholomew Cokes, would certainly have been an uncomfortable reminder of the anti-Trinitarians’ execution two years earlier.Footnote 25
Nonetheless, the executions of Wightman and Legate were a significant watershed in the persecution of religious dissent. The two anti-Trinitarians were the last heretics ever to be burned at the stake in England. In fact, James’ intention to ‘commit [Legate] publicly to the fire, before the people, in a public and open place in West-Smithfield … for the manifest example of other Christians, lest they slide into the same fault’ had backfired disastrously.Footnote 26 As Thomas Fuller recounts in his Church History of Britain (1655), the burnings did not have the intended effect and inspired sympathy rather than contempt for the heretics:
the purblind eyes of vulgar judgments looked only on what was next to them, the suffering itself, which they beheld with compassion, not minding the demerit of the guilt which deserved the same. Besides, such being unable to distinguish betwixt constancy and obstinacy, were ready to entertain good thoughts even of the opinion of those heretics, who sealed them so manfully with their blood. Wherefore king James politicly preferred, that heretics hereafter, though condemned, should silently and privately waste themselves away in the prison, rather than to grace them and amuse others with the solemnity of a public execution, which in popular judgments usurped the honour of a persecution.Footnote 27
The form of power which New Historicists have called ‘the spectacle of the scaffold’ had apparently run its course by the early seventeenth century, at least with regard to religious dissent.Footnote 28 Unlike executions for more ordinary crimes, heresy executions were ideologically sensitive because they bestowed the cultural capital of martyrdom on their victims – the ‘usurped honour of a persecution’.Footnote 29 It is not least for this reason that an emphatic rejection of religious conflict and factionalism could paradoxically function as a form of intolerance. Where there is no persecution – or, rather, where it is hidden from sight and where heretics ‘silently and privately waste themselves away in the prison’ – there is no martyrdom either. There is only the stubborn delusion of self-aggrandising troublemakers. In a state that professes to have stopped persecuting heretics, the blame for religious divisions is to be laid exclusively on the dissenter.
Such a deconstruction of martyrdom was already in full sway in James’ Catholic policies, especially in the context of the Oath of Allegiance controversy, when Jonson wrote Bartholomew Fair.Footnote 30 The Oath was a reaction to the Gunpowder Plot and prima facie a means to ensure the loyalty of James’ Catholic subjects. Its text required recusants to swear, among other things, that ‘our Soveraigne Lorde Kinge James is lawfull and rightfull King of this Realme’, and that the Pope does not have ‘any Power or Authoritye to depose the King … or to authorize any Forraigne Prince to invade or annoy hym or his Countries, or to discharge any of his Subjectes of their Allegiaunce and Obedience to his Majestie’.Footnote 31 The enactment of the Oath in 1606 spawned a lengthy, international debate on whether Catholics could legitimately take it without violating their conscience, which reached its peak between 1609 and 1614. There is still considerable scholarly disagreement regarding its enforcement as well as its purpose.Footnote 32 In the following, however, I limit myself to its implications for contemporary discourses of martyrdom.
King James contributed to the extended paper war himself and was at pains to denigrate the rhetoric of martyrdom which Catholic opponents employed in order to justify the refusal to take the Oath. In Triplico nodo, triplex cuneus (1608), James vehemently denies that the Oath constitutes a form of religious persecution and that those who refuse it have any claim to the crown of martyrdom: ‘I intended no persecution against them for conscience cause, but onely desired to be secured of them for ciuill obedience, which for conscience cause they were bound to performe’.Footnote 33 In his speech to Parliament in 1610, James further declares that ‘the gallantnesse of many mens spirits, and the wilfulnesse of their humors, rather then the justnesse of the cause, makes them to take a pride boldly to endure any torments or death it selfe, to gaine thereby the reputation of Martyrdome, though but in a false shadow’.Footnote 34 What would be admirable constancy in the case of the true martyr is therefore arrogant obstinacy in the case of recusants.
In his defence of the Oath of Allegiance, James reproduced the Augustinian critique of martyrdom, which the church father had employed against the schismatic Donatists in his own day. Just as James questions ‘the justnesse of the [recusants’] cause’,Footnote 35 Augustine had claimed that it was the cause and not the punishment that makes the martyr.Footnote 36 Moreover, just as recusants, according to James, ‘take a pride boldly to endure any torments or death it self, to gaine thereby the reputation of Martyrdome, though but in a false shadow’, Donatists were, according to Augustine, suicidally enamoured of the prospect of martyrdom, which they prioritised over a concerted effort to promote true religion and abolish idolatry, as he writes in ep. 185 to Count Boniface:
[W]hen there was idol worship, they [i.e. the Donatists] used to come in great hordes to the crowded ceremonies of the pagans, not to break the idols, but to be killed by the worshippers of idols. If they had received authority to break the idols and tried to do it, then, if anything happened to them, they might have had some kind of shadow of the name of martyr, but they came solely to be killed, leaving the idols intact.Footnote 37
In Bartholomew Fair, Jonson is arguably complicit in James’ Augustinian deflation of Catholic pretensions to martyrdom as a ‘false shadow’.Footnote 38 When the deluded Overdo ‘cheerfully’ (4.1.28) puts his leg in the stocks, the watchman Bristle mocks his patience and willingness to suffer as follows: ‘O’my conscience, a seminary! He kisses the stocks’ (4.1.29).Footnote 39 As Bristle suggests, the aptly named Overdo is enamoured of a pathos of martyrdom that has no grounding in reality, and his association with a Catholic seminary priest suggests that those who refused to take the Oath of Allegiance were no less risible.Footnote 40 We do not actually know whether Jonson himself took the Oath, but, given his refusal to take the sacrament before his re-conversion to the Church of England, he might well have been obliged to do so.Footnote 41 Judging by his dramatic output, at least, it seems unlikely that he would have refused to take the Oath. In his Catiline His Conspiracy (1611), a play that offers numerous parallels to the Gunpowder Plot, Jonson has Cicero persuade the conspirator Curius to turn intelligencer (as Jonson himself had done after the Plot) by declaring that ‘no religion binds men to be traitors’ (3.2.135).Footnote 42 According to Jonson’s Cicero, political and spiritual loyalty are scrupulously to be kept apart.
For his disavowal of the militant recusancy advocated by Cardinal Bellarmine and Pope Paul V, Jonson might well have taken his cue from his friend John Donne.Footnote 43 Donne likewise had a Catholic past to shed when he launched his ecclesiastical career with his Pseudo-Martyr (1610), in which he defended the Oath of Allegiance and rejected Catholic pretensions to martyrdom for the refusal to take the Oath.Footnote 44 As Donne warns in his treatise, the prospective martyr ‘may suffer some infirmitie: yea, putrefaction, by admixture of humane and passionate respects, if when we are admitted to bee witnesses of Gods honour, we loue our owne glory too much’.Footnote 45 In Bartholomew Fair, the self-important Overdo, who ‘kisses the stocks’,Footnote 46 arguably likewise embodies what Donne calls ‘an inordinate and corrupt affectation of Martyrdome’.Footnote 47 As we have already seen in Sejanus, Jonson is critical of martyrdom and contrasts Silius’ heroic but pointless imitation of Cato with neo-Stoicist constancy as a form of inward retreat. In Bartholomew Fair, Jonson again dismisses a Stoicist interpretation of martyrdom when Overdo is mocked as a ‘Stoic i’the stocks’, a ‘fool … turned philosopher’ (4.6.81–2).Footnote 48 Jonson thus echoes Donne, who criticises the Jesuits, who strive to outdo Stoicist models of suicide, ‘the Catoes, the Porciaes, and the Cleopatraes’, in their ‘hunger of false-Martyrdome’.Footnote 49 While Silius’ suicide in Sejanus may be inefficient but at least morally admirable, Stoicist claims to martyrdom are subjected to merciless ridicule in Bartholomew Fair.
Perhaps, this transformation of ambivalence into ridicule is related to the fact that Jonson had, at least outwardly, changed sides in the meantime. Jonson returned to the bosom of the Church of England at around the same time that Donne published Pseudo-Martyr. His re-conversion was presumably triggered by the aforementioned assassination of Henri IV on 14 May 1610. Fearing a similar fate to that of the French King, James issued a proclamation on 2 June 1610 that barred Catholics from access to court. Jonson’s persistence in the Catholic faith would effectively have ruined his career as a court poet and might have had even worse consequences.Footnote 50 Henri’s assassination was followed by an upsurge in anti-Catholic measures, including a stricter enforcement and wider application of the Oath of Allegiance, which surpassed the reaction to the Gunpowder Plot considerably.Footnote 51 However, Donne and Jonson decided to launch, or save, respectively, their careers within the Jacobean establishment at this critical watershed. Hence, both had a personal stake in denigrating the road not taken.
Even though King James ostensibly offered Catholics an alternative to militant recusancy, church papists and Catholics who took the Oath of Allegiance were often subject to suspicion. Whereas recusants at least showed their true colours, the loyalty of conformists was, in the eyes of many English Protestants, only skin-deep.Footnote 52 Jonson’s satire of espionage in Overdo’s self-important intelligence-gathering missions and his general tendency in Bartholomew Fair to tone down the paranoid obsession with the dangers of the hidden self, which was so common in the anti-Puritan satire of the early 1590s, are arguably related to a desire to ward off similar intrusions into the conscience of Catholic conformists. Jonson may ridicule recusancy, but Bartholomew Fair is certainly not a crudely anti-Catholic play. On the contrary, Jonson’s concern with salvaging a sphere of inward dissent, which we have already encountered in Sejanus, arguably persists in a somewhat different, although equally pessimistic, register in Bartholomew Fair, as I will discuss in more detail later in this chapter.
Notably, Jonson does not only expose recusant claims to martyrdom; he also undermines the Puritan pathos of nonconformity in the person of Zeal-of-the-Land Busy. Like Overdo, Busy is put in the stocks and makes rather much of his suffering: ‘the lion may roar, but he cannot bite. I am glad to be thus separated from the heathen of the land, and put apart in the stocks for the holy cause’ (4.6.67–9).Footnote 53 Jonson, however, thoroughly deflates Busy’s ‘holy cause’. Busy may claim that he ‘sitteth here to prophesy the destruction of fairs and May-games, wakes, and Whitsun ales, and doth sigh and groan for the reformation of these abuses’ (4.6.71–3).Footnote 54 However, he is put in the stocks not for confessing Christ but for his drunken (3.6.39–40) vandalism of Joan Trash’s gingerbread stand, which he condemns as ‘the merchandise of Babylon’ (3.6.72).Footnote 55 If it is the cause and not the punishment that makes the martyr, as Augustine put it, Zeal’s claim to the crown of martyrdom is decidedly lacking.
There is a further twist to Jonson’s satire of martyrdom. Hypocrisy, the central trait of the stage Puritan, stands, at first glance, in obvious contradiction with Puritan nonconformity. However, Jonson reconciles the two by expanding on James’ denunciation of martyrdom as ‘a false shadow’, driven by a desire for the reputation of martyrdom rather than the real thing. Busy denounces his fellow-detainee Wasp, who manages to escape from the stocks, in the typical terms of Elizabethan anti-Nicodemism, as ‘a halting neutral … that will not endure the heat of persecution’ (4.6.91–2).Footnote 56 However, despite his claim that he ‘rejoiceth in his affliction’ (4.6.71),Footnote 57 Busy is, like Wasp, less than eager to suffer for his faith. When Bristle and the madman Troubleall start fighting and leave the stocks open, Busy declares this unexpected turn of events a ‘miracle’ (4.6.133) and seizes his chance to slip away.Footnote 58 In Bartholomew Fair, those who claim to suffer for their faith are either deluded or striking a transparently hypocritical pose of nonconformity.
Christian Liberty and the ‘Violence of Singularity’
In Basilikon Doron, which was sold in London within days of Elizabeth’s death, King James prominently set out the stakes of his ecclesiastical policy to his new English subjects for the first time. As James tells his son, ‘your office is … mixed, betwixt the Ecclesiasticall and ciuill estate: For a King is not merè laicus, as both the Papists and Anabaptists woulde haue him, to the which error also the Puritanes incline ouer farre’.Footnote 59 The authority of Scripture may set limits to the monarch’s authority in religious matters,Footnote 60 but it leaves some scope in the sphere of adiaphora, or things indifferent, in terms of which the debate on the Puritan liturgical reform platform was often framed. According to the doctrine of adiaphora, some questions concerning religious observance are indifferent to salvation, hence subject to Christian liberty.Footnote 61 As I argue in the following, the Elizabethan and Jacobean debate on Christian liberty will help to demonstrate how Jonson’s satire of the all too human failings of his Puritan characters is not simply a form of moralising social critique but also works to undermine the theological foundations of Puritan nonconformity.
As James declares in Basilikon Doron with respect to the controversies over the Prayer Book, especially the surplice, ‘I am so farre from being contentious in these things (which for my owne part I euer esteemed as indifferent) as I doe equally loue and honour the learned and graue men of either of these opinions’.Footnote 62 However, such indifference does not imply toleration or leniency towards Puritan nonconformity. On the contrary, the authority to regulate adiaphora belongs to the monarch alone, and not to the Puritans: ‘if … they vrge you to embrace any of their fantasies in the place of Gods words … acknowledge them for no other then vaine men, exceeding the bounds of their calling; and according to your office, grauely and with authoritie redact them in order againe’.Footnote 63 Since salvation was not at stake in such outward matters, Puritans were to submit their private opinions to royal supremacy. Christian liberty could thus entail a political obligation of Nicodemism. To be clear, the scope of such a licence, or duty, of conformity was frequently perceived to be limited. Calvin, for instance, criticised Nicodemites who believed that ‘toutes choses externes sont en la liberté du Chrestien’Footnote 64 and was adamant that participation in the Catholic Mass constituted an intolerable violation of the purity of faith.Footnote 65 From a political perspective, however, defining the scope of things indifferent as broadly as possible could be a means of extending the reach of secular authority in religious matters. The more easy-going a regime presents itself with respect to the minutiae of religious doctrine and ritual and the more it ridicules the ‘precision’ and stricture of religious dissenters, the more forceful its assertion of its own authority to regulate an expansive area of things indifferent might turn out to be.
This paradoxical authoritarianism reared its head, for instance, at the Hampton Court Conference in January 1604, when James first clashed with his new Puritan subjects. The double-faced nature of Christian liberty became apparent in the discussion of long-time Puritan grievances, such as the use of the sign of the cross in baptism. When the Puritan delegate John Knewstub asked ‘how farre such an ordinance of the church was to bind them, without impeaching their Christian liberty?’, James was ‘much moved’ and said that Knewstub’s concern ‘smelled very rankly of anabaptism’,Footnote 66 just as he had argued in the Basilikon Doron that Puritan nonconformists were ‘agreeing with the general rule of all Anabaptists, in the contempt of the ciuill Magistrate’.Footnote 67 In other words, claiming Christian liberty was an affront to royal supremacy, and James ruled out, as a matter of principle, any tolerance for diversity in outward ceremonies: ‘I will none of that; I will have one doctrine and one discipline, one religion in substance and in ceremony: and therefore I charge you never to speak more to that point, (how far you are bound to obey,) when the church hath ordained it’.Footnote 68 As the Jacobean theorist of royal supremacy John Tichborne put it five years later, Christian liberty is not a liberty of the individual subject but the ‘the liberty of Christian Princes’ to regulate things indifferent as they see fit.Footnote 69
The concept of Christian liberty also lies at the heart of the religious and literary politics of Bartholomew Fair. Even though Christian liberty has been virtually ignored in the criticism of the play,Footnote 70 its simultaneously libertarian and authoritarian implications arguably account for the paradoxically moderate and inclusive form of intolerance of Jonson’s Bartholomew Fair, which is so easily misread as genuine toleration. Jonson was aware of the debates surrounding Christian liberty, as is suggested by the game of vapours in act 4 scene 4, according to the stage directions ‘nonsense: every man to oppose the last man that spoke, whether it concerned him or no’ (4.4.25–8).Footnote 71 When Quarlous bursts into laughter while observing the game, he defends himself against Wasp as follows: ‘Sir, you’ll allow me my Christian liberty. I may laugh, I hope’ (4.4.94).Footnote 72 However, when Christian liberty itself becomes the subject of the game of vapours, a potent symbol for the alleged contentiousness of the Puritans, Knockem ominously interferes, as if he were aware of the decades of vehement controversy on the subject: ‘No, that vapour is too lofty’ (4.4.100).Footnote 73 It was not up to anyone but the King to claim Christian liberty. Already at the Hampton Court Conference, James had warned the Puritans ‘never to speak more to that point’.Footnote 74 Any argument about Christian liberty would bring the players directly into the heart of a religious controversy that ever threatened to undermine the Church of England and the monarch’s supremacy over it.
This is the only explicit reference to Christian liberty in the play, but the concept can be fruitfully applied to Busy’s meditations on whether it is lawful to visit the fair. The subject comes up as John Littlewit urges his pregnant wife, Win, to feign a sudden longing to eat pig so that they may go to the fair, where Littlewit’s puppet play will be performed. Win’s godly mother, Dame Purecraft, consults Busy, who first rejects the Bartholomew-pig as ‘a spice of idolatry’ (1.6.44).Footnote 75 However, Purecraft asks him again to ‘make it as lawful as you can’ (1.6.49–50),Footnote 76 and Busy displays considerable theological ingenuity when he invokes Christian liberty in order to justify the visit to the fair. In doing so, he also prepares the ground for the larger questions of church government that underlie Jonson’s treatment of Puritanism in Bartholomew Fair.
Initially, Busy admits that going to the fair ‘hath a face of offence with the weak, a great face, a foul face’ (1.6.56).Footnote 77 Busy’s terminology, especially his ‘spice of idolatry’, and his worries about causing ‘offence’ are indebted to 1 Corinthians, in which Paul warns against offending the weak brethren by eating pagan sacrificial meat (idolythes), that is, meats that were consecrated to idols before they were consumed. Even though eating them is indifferent per se and subject to Christian liberty, Paul expresses his concern that doing so might be misunderstood by the weak, that is, those who do not understand that the act is indeed indifferent, as a carte blanche for indulging in idolatry:
For if any man se thee which hast knowledge, sit at table in the idoles temple, shall not the conscience of him which is weake, be boldened to eat those things which are sacrificed to idoles? And through thy knowledge shal the weake brother perish, for whome Christ dyed … Wherefore if meat offend my brother, I will eat no flesh while the worlde standeth, that I may not offend my brother.
This concern about causing offence was frequently cited by Reformed theologians such as Calvin, Bullinger, and Vermigli in order to forestall a Nicodemite interpretation of Christian liberty.Footnote 78 In Elizabethan England, it also featured prominently in Puritan discourses of nonconformity. Paul’s sacrificial meats were accordingly perceived as a Biblical equivalent for the controversial clerical vestments in the debates between Puritans and conformists.Footnote 79 Thomas Cartwright, for instance, closely adapts 1 Cor. 8 to the Elizabethan context, when he argues that the surplice may not be strictly idolatrous but nonetheless cause offence to weaker brethren:
[A]lthoughe I haue knowledge / and knowe that the wearing of a surplice is lawfull for me / yet an other whyche hathe not knowledge / is by my example edifyed / or strengthened to weare a surplice / whereof he can tell no grounde whye he shoulde weare it / and so synneth agaynste hys conscience: and for thys cause S. Paule concludeth / that that whych a man may doe in respecte of hymselfe / maye not be done / and is not lawfull to be done / in respecte of other [sic].Footnote 80
The ingenuous Busy in Bartholomew Fair, however, finds a way to mitigate this nonconformist imperative in his case for eating pig. Using a sartorial metaphor that seems to echo Cartwright’s link between Paul’s sacrificial meats and the Puritan rejection of certain clerical vestments, Busy means to ‘have a veil put over’ (1.6.57) the offence by eating ‘with a reformed mouth, with sobriety and humbleness, not gorged in with gluttony or greediness’ (1.6.59–61).Footnote 81 In this regard, Busy’s rejection of ‘gluttony or greediness’ also resonates with Calvin’s discussion of Christian liberty in the Institutes, where the Genevan reformer warns that when things indifferent ‘are coveted too greedily, when they are proudly boasted of, when they are lavishly squandered, things that were of themselves otherwise lawful are certainly defiled by these vices’.Footnote 82 By claiming to eat pig with a ‘reformed mouth’, Busy steers his case in the direction of the loophole implied in Calvin’s argumentation, namely, that Christian liberty may indeed be lawfully enjoyed if its enjoyment is free from greed and other vices.
However, Christian liberty is not only a liberty to participate in indifferent ceremonies. It is also a liberty, and sometimes even a duty, of nonconformity. Despite all his scruples concerning the right use of Christian liberty, Calvin notes with regard to Jewish ceremonial law that ‘it is sometimes important for our freedom to be declared before men’.Footnote 83 The point is that Christ has freed us from the law and that allegedly excessive legalism obscures Christ’s justification by faith. Paul may have circumcised Timothy in order not to offend the Jews (Acts 16:3), but he also rebuked Peter for excessive accommodation of Jewish dietary laws (Gal. 2:11–14) and refused to circumcise Titus (Gal. 2:3) so ‘that the trueth of the Gospel might continue with you’ (Gal. 2:4).Footnote 84 While Christian liberty could be marshalled in the service of outward conformity in things indifferent, as apologists of royal supremacy did from the vestments controversy onwards, it could also serve as a justification, even duty, of nonconformity, as Puritans emphasised.
In Bartholomew Fair, what makes Busy’s use of Christian liberty so brilliant is that, in a second step, he gives his tenuous justification of conformity a specious air of nonconformity. Even more, he does so by using the anti-Puritan stereotype of Jewish legalism to his own advantage. Thus, Busy justifies the eating of pig as a declaration of Christian liberty in order to pre-empt the charge of Judaism, which was levelled against Puritans for their strictness in ceremonial questions: ‘In the way of comfort to the weak, I will go, and eat. I will eat exceedingly, and prophesy. There may be a good use made of it, too, now I think on’t: by the public eating of swine’s flesh, to profess our hate and loathing of Judaism, whereof the Brethren stand taxed. I will therefore eat, yea, I will eat exceedingly’ (1.6.74–8).Footnote 85 Taking up Calvin’s caveat that Christian liberty can be ‘endangered in weak consciences’ by inflexible strictness in outward ceremonies,Footnote 86 Busy conjures the spectre of Judaism so that he may heroically proclaim the liberating message of the Gospel by eating pig ‘[i]n the way of comfort to the weak’, just as Paul censured Peter for accommodating Jewish dietary laws and refused to circumcise Titus.
Busy’s oscillation between conformist and nonconformist interpretations of Christian liberty reflects the Puritan emphasis that there can be no strict rule about the enjoyment of Christian liberty in things indifferent, which depends in any given case on whether it serves to edify or causes offence.Footnote 87 However, his case of conscience is entirely opportunistic and, as he freely admits, ‘subject to construction’ (1.6.55).Footnote 88 Busy has condemned the fair as idolatrous just a few lines earlier, and his words, ‘now I think on’t’, reveal that his brilliant invocation of Judaising is an improvised rationalisation of his carnal desires (to eat pig). Busy thus plays into the hands of conformist theologians, who accused Puritan nonconformists of anarchy and arbitrary wilfulness. According to Richard Hooker, for instance, the Puritan attitude to Christian liberty ‘shaketh universallie the fabrick of goverment, tendeth to anarchie and meere confusion’.Footnote 89 Hence, ‘[t]hose things which the Law of God leaveth arbitrarie and at libertie are all subject unto possitive lawes of men, which lawes for the common benefit abridg particular mens liberties in such thinges as farre as the rules of equitie will suffer. This wee must either maineteine or els overturne the world and make everie man his own commander’.Footnote 90 Jonson, who would later single out Hooker’s Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity as the pre-eminent English work ‘for church matters’Footnote 91 and praise its author as one of England’s ‘great master[s] of wit and language’,Footnote 92 offers in Bartholomew Fair a splendid case of such pernicious individualism in the Puritan Busy, who is ‘of a most lunatic conscience and spleen, and affects the violence of singularity in all he does’ (1.3.108–9).Footnote 93
Still, a number of critics have found that Bartholomew Fair is not entirely unsympathetic towards Puritan revulsion against the abominations of the eponymous fair. Jonson’s unflinching portrayal of the petty criminality, ruthless competition, and generally sordid mores of the fair raises the question of whether Puritans do not have a point in abstaining from such ungodly pastimes.Footnote 94 However, if the fair is, as Busy’s case of conscience suggests, a sphere of Christian liberty, where one may eat pig and freely indulge in other kinds of debauchery, its unappealing sides simply prove the conformist case that Christian liberty needs regulation and cannot be enjoyed at one’s individual discretion. The play thus corroborates the authoritarian conclusions of theorists of church government such as John Bridges, who emphasises in his Defence of the gouernment established in the Church of Englande for ecclesiasticall matters (1587) that God does not allow ‘a varying and vnbrideled licence’ in things indifferent; instead, he has ‘moderated the libertie which he gaue’ in the form of ‘the godly lawes of the Church, in which discipline and order is conteyned’.Footnote 95
Significantly, Bridges uses the term ‘moderation’ not in the sense of reticence in government but in support of a strong assertion of discipline and order. Historians such as Lori Anne Ferrell and Ethan H. Shagan have shown that the Elizabethan and Jacobean rhetoric of moderation was an authoritarian ideology of government control and coercion rather than an expression of a desire for peace or reticence in state violence.Footnote 96 The same is true for Christian liberty, which had nothing to do with individual freedom when it was invoked by King James and other theorists of royal supremacy. On the contrary, Christian liberty was an authoritarian ideology of government, which justified the suppression of dissent in an always controversial area of things indifferent. Part and parcel of this ideology was the claim that things indifferent needed regulation because individual liberty without moderation was always liable to degenerate into licence.
More specifically, this alleged need for moderation as regulation also served to buttress hierarchical forms of secular as well as ecclesiastical government. The Presbyterian model of church government, based as it was on bottom-up principles of election and representation throughout the ranks of its ecclesiastical structure, was frequently criticised by conformist theologians for lacking the hierarchical control that could prevent its degeneration into chaos and anarchy. As Shagan has shown, this point was often made with reference to the supposedly unbridled and licentious Puritan individual, in whom reason likewise fails to exercise proper hierarchical control over the passions and the body: ‘For if the puritans themselves were dangerously ungoverned, it followed that the Presbyterian programme for the Church was a form of ungovernment, a release rather than a moderation of sinful affections’.Footnote 97 The lack of moderation on the level of the individual, which is so conspicuously on display in Busy’s ‘violent singularity’, calls for moderation as a governmental measure of repression.
Bridges, for instance, prominently employs this analogy between the individual and the church in his call to moderate Christian liberty with ‘the godly lawes of the Church’,Footnote 98 when he claims that the Puritans’ ‘immoderate heate of their inconsiderate zeale’ has ‘inflamed their passions and patience againste the lawfull authority of the Bishops’Footnote 99 and that they ‘haue ouer-shot themselues’ in ‘this their humor for this Presbyterie’.Footnote 100 Such emphasis on the imbalance of the Puritan individual is a staple of anti-Puritan writings. Also the idea of a specifically Puritan ‘humour’ is evident as early as in 1585, when the vice-chancellor of the University of Cambridge, Andrew Perne, wrote to Burghley and warned him against the Puritans’ ‘fantastical humours daily given to dangerous innovations’ and emphasised the need ‘to bridle and restrain the licentious affections of the youth of the university at this day’.Footnote 101 For anti-Puritan polemicists, there was a clear connection between a lack of governance within the human body, manifesting itself in unbridled passions and humoral imbalance, and the lack of governance in church affairs, ‘this their humor for this Presbyterie’. In the induction to Jonson’s Magnetic Lady (1632), Probee likewise draws a parallel between moderation in the microcosmos of the body and moderation in the macrocosmos of the church, when he compares the reconciliation of humours to ‘the reconciliation of both churches’ and argues that ‘the quarrel between humours’ is ‘the root of all schism and faction, both in church and commonwealth’.Footnote 102 Puritan humours were not only a matter of personal ethics, a conventional anti-Puritan slur exposing their moral shortcomings, but the bedrock for the justification of authoritarian church government and its extension over things indifferent.
Bartholomew Fair reproduces this long tradition of alleged Puritan immoderation. In Busy’s Christian liberty of eating pig, for instance, moderation is conspicuously absent. Busy’s announcement that he will ‘eat exceedingly’ suggests that his is everything else but a ‘reformed mouth’. Indeed, he ends up eating two and a half pigs all by himself (3.6.39).Footnote 103 His drunken railing, which eventually lands him in the stocks as a martyr for the ‘holy cause’, confirms what Bridges calls the Puritans’ ‘vnbrideled licence’.Footnote 104 In turn, when Quarlous paints the horrors of a Puritan household before the eyes of Winwife, who has set his ambitions on wooing the godly widow Purecraft, he mocks the Puritan ideal of ecclesiastic self-government. As Quarlous imagines the faithful assembly, it is ‘the matron, your spouse [i.e., Purecraft], who moderates with a cup of wine, ever and anon, and a sentence out of Knox between’ (1.3.73–4).Footnote 105 The inversion of gender hierarchies vividly demonstrates the lack of government implied in the Puritan reform programme and echoes King James, who likewise denigrated Puritan government in Basilikon Doron by comparing it to Xanthippe’s misrule in the household of Socrates.Footnote 106 Jonson’s satirical vision of Puritan discipline as a wine-drenched gynaecocracy conveys a sense of inverted hierarchies and disorderly procedure, which makes only too clear that Puritan moderation is no moderation at all.
Since Busy conceptualises the fair as a contested site of Christian liberty in his initial casuistry, it is only fitting that it is a site of the spiritual excess and ecclesiastical disorder associated with Puritanism. The fair brings out the worst dissenting instincts in Busy, such as his iconoclastic vandalism against gingerbread men, but especially his claim to divine inspiration and the gift of prophecy. Even before the Littlewit household departs to the fair, Busy proclaims: ‘I will eat exceedingly, and prophesy’ (1.6.74–5).Footnote 107 His abuse of Christian liberty manifests itself not only in his gluttonous gorging on pig but also in his prophetic aspirations as an unlawful arrogation of spiritual authority. His dietary incontinence is thus a visible symbol for his spiritual incontinence.
As a prophet, Busy reflects the tendency of anti-Puritan polemicists to denigrate Puritans as some sort of misguided, spiritualist Anabaptists, who make rather too much of individual inspiration in their refusal to submit Christian liberty to royal authority.Footnote 108 Already at the Hampton Court Conference, for instance, James recalled the case of the Scottish Presbyterian John Black, who ‘would hold conformity with his majesties ordinances for matters of doctrine, but for matters of ceremonie, they were to be left in Christian liberty to every man, as he received more and more light from the illumination of God’s Spirit; even till they go mad, quoth the king, with their own light’.Footnote 109 Busy too ‘is more than an elder’. He is ‘a prophet’ (1.3.91),Footnote 110 who ‘does dream now, and see visions’ (1.3.93),Footnote 111 and who ‘derides all antiquity; defies any other learning than inspiration’ (1.3.112–13).Footnote 112 Warming up for his disputation with the puppet Dionysius, Busy invocates the Spirit in most dramatic terms: ‘I will not fear to make my spirit and gifts known. Assist me, zeal, fill me, fill me, that is, make me full!’ (5.5.33–4).Footnote 113 Busy thus confirms James’ view that Puritan nonconformists were nothing but ‘brain-sicke and headie Preachers’,Footnote 114 better suited for Bedlam than the pulpit.
Adiaphora and Apostasy
As I have argued so far, Jonson’s portrayal of Puritan derailment and licentiousness is to be understood in the context of polemical attacks on the Presbyterian platform and Puritan claims to Christian liberty. Puritan ideals of church government are, as Bartholomew Fair suggests, the product of misguided hubris, blind to the obvious need for governmental control over the church in order to moderate its excesses. At the same time, however, the play strikes a highly ambivalent note on the relationship between Christian liberty and conformity. The ease with which Busy and his companions are absorbed into the larger world represented by the fair and eventually lose their nonconformist ethos, culminating in Busy’s ‘conversion’ in the theatre, is not simply proof of their supposed hypocrisy. Busy’s initial fears of idolatrous infection were also a common theme in anti-Nicodemite warnings against outward conformity and anti-theatrical writings that condemned the stage as a source of infectious corruption.
Anti-theatrical as well as anti-Nicodemite discourses were predicated on the notion of a permeable and unstable self, in which – unlike in neo-Stoicist conceptions of selfhood, which Jonson explores in Sejanus – the distinction between inward and outward self was always liable to collapse. With Busy’s conversion during a puppet play, Jonson suggests that the theatre might be an institution capable of establishing community and religious unity by transforming its spectators. However, Jonson represents this process in the language and conceptual categories of anti-theatricality and anti-Nicodemism. As I will argue in the following, this negative attitude towards the theatre’s powers of transformation is probably owed not only to Jonson’s conflicted view of the theatre but also to a residual nonconformist sensibility that registers the parallels between Puritan and Catholic concerns about conformity, which affected Jonson’s own religious identity.
Despite Busy’s nonconformist zeal, his initial insistence on a separation between external profanity and internal purity, as expressed in his claim that ‘we may be religious in midst of the profane’ (1.6.59),Footnote 115 soon collapses once he has taken up the scent of the Bartholomew pig. Ironically, Busy is very much aware of the danger of idolatrous infection. He is accordingly worried about how much Win Littlewit enjoys herself at the fair, as he tells her mother: ‘Sister, let her fly the impurity of the place swiftly, lest she partake of the pitch thereof’ (3.6.34–5).Footnote 116 Already in Chapter 6, I briefly touched on the danger of infection against which both Catholic and Protestant anti-Nicodemite writers warned. The proverbial pitch (Eccles. 13:1), to which Busy alludes and which is famously cited by Falstaff (1H4 2.4.400–4), was prominent in such admonitions. For instance, Vermigli warns in his discussion of ‘dwelling among Infidels’ that ‘our nature is so framed, by reason of naturall or originall sinne, as we be subiect on euerie side to corruption’; hence, ‘the vices of other men are likened vnto pitch, the which sticketh wonderfull fast to the fingers and garments of them which touch it’.Footnote 117 Catholic writers such as Gregory Martin, Robert Parsons, and Henry Garnet cautioned against the corrupting influence of conformity in very similar terms. Garnet, for instance, moralises the conversion of the former church papist Thomas Bell to Protestantism as follows: ‘This is the miserable progression of lamentable Schismatickes, who trusting too much to their owne cleannes, aduenture to touch pitch’.Footnote 118 Jonson arguably dramatises such concerns in Busy, whose initial intention to remain ‘religious in midst of the profane’ (1.6.59) is belied by his eventual conversion.Footnote 119
Puritan debates on nonconformity were closely mirrored by their Catholic counterparts, which drew on the same Biblical precedents, fears of pollution, and Pauline theology of adiaphora and Christian liberty.Footnote 120 Unsettling parallels can be drawn between the trajectory of Busy’s conversion and Jonson’s own biography. As a Catholic, Jonson himself had exposed himself to the danger of infection by practising a form of semi-conformity before he fully returned to the Church of England. Jonson and his wife were cited before the consistory court of London on 10 January 1606, not for failing to go to church but merely for refusing to take the sacrament,Footnote 121 a controversial, but apparently widespread practice among Catholics at the time. On the occasion of his second citation on 16 April 1606, Jonson claimed to have gone to church ‘this halfe yeare’.Footnote 122 In Bartholomew Fair, Busy’s stance towards the idolatrous fair might likewise be described as a form of semi-conformity. Busy is adamant that ‘[o]nly pig was not comprehended in my admonition’ (3.6.22)Footnote 123 and that the fair’s temptations are otherwise to be shunned or at least condemned. However, as Littlewit tells his wife, ‘[n]ow you ha’ begun with pig, you may long for anything’ (3.6.7).Footnote 124 Busy and the Littlewits fully succumb to the sensual temptations of the fair, just as anti-Nicodemite writers predicted. Equally fond of the ‘diet-drink of Satan’s’ (3.6.24-5)Footnote 125 as Busy, Jonson too eventually gave up his scruples concerning the Lord’s Supper and, ‘in token of true reconciliation’ with the Church of England, ‘drank out all the full cup of wine’ in the communion.Footnote 126
Jonson’s semi-conformity was, as Peter Lake suggests, primarily a gesture of political obedience.Footnote 127 Proponents of semi-conformity suggested that going to church was not so much a religious as a political act. As the manuscript treatise ascribed to either Alban Langdale or William Clitherow puts it, ‘yf I pray not with them, if I sett whan they knele, if I refuse theire communion’, there is no religious act involved, but only a ‘signum distinctivum betwene a trew subiect and a rebell’.Footnote 128 Bell, the subject of Garnet’s condemnation, had even set down a formula to be declared in such a case: ‘Good people I ame [sic] come hither not for any lykinge I have of any sacramentes, service, or sermons accustomablye used in this place, or to exhibite any reverence to the same, but only to give a sygne of my allegiance and true loyalty to my prince, This is the onlye cause of my cominge and no other’.Footnote 129 Jonson’s friend, the ex-Jesuit Thomas Wright, set down a similar formula and argued that it was lawful to attend Protestant sermons, albeit one should abstain from the sacrament and common prayer. Wright was, in fact, the most prominent proponent of semi-conformity in the 1600s and the primary target of Paul V’s breve from 1606, which condemned the Oath of Allegiance and any sort of conformity.Footnote 130 Wright’s influence might thus well have played a previously underappreciated role in Jonson’s semi-conformity after the Gunpowder Plot.Footnote 131
Semi-conformity was by no means necessarily a form of dissimulation. As Alexandra Walsham has pointed out, ‘regularly attending church papists were often anything but fencesitters. In a sense, a church was the most appropriate forum in which to dramatise one’s ridicule and repudiation of the Reformation’.Footnote 132 Even a hardliner like Gregory Martin conceded that one might avoid giving offence to one’s fellow believers by turning one’s presence in church into a performance of protest: ‘A very learned Doctor of Diuinitie, and sounde Catholike may lawfully come to heretical sermons for the better confuting of them’.Footnote 133 In Bartholomew Fair, Busy might almost be read as a parody of Martin’s ‘very learned Doctor of Diuinitie’, whose holy duty it is to heckle the Protestant service. Busy’s semi-conformity too amounts to a dramatisation of dissent, as he ‘cannot be silent’ (3.6.61),Footnote 134 engages in iconoclastic vandalism, and ends in the stock to ‘sigh and groan for the reformation of these abuses’ (4.6.73).Footnote 135 What is true for the Catholic semi-conformist is therefore just as true for the semi-conformist Puritan: ‘Separation within the Church involved a constantly maintained witness of social and cultural distinctiveness practised against neighbours with whom the godly were in daily face-to-face contact and with whom they met in church communion’.Footnote 136 Parallels between the Puritan Busy and the ideal of the Catholic semi-conformist, both of whom paradoxically dramatise their dissent in the very forum whose abuses they denounce, are not necessarily far-fetched and might indeed be meant to shed a critical light on Catholic as much as on Puritan semi-conformity. In an attack on Bell from c. 1588, one I. G. (John Mush?), for instance, argues that Catholic semi-conformists could hardly be distinguished from their Puritan counterparts when they dramatised their dissent among the infidels:Footnote 137
the protestacion which our comfortoure [i.e., Bell] settethe do[w]ne … may be made as well by a puritane as by a catholyke, for ther is not one word in yt to signifye the protester a catholyke, and the puritantes [sic] resorte to protestantes service not for any lykinge they have of it but merelye for to shewe a sygne of ther temporall loyaltye as the catholykes doe.Footnote 138
However, Busy shows no sign of political loyalty, which might be owed not only to the stereotype of the inherently seditious Puritan but also to a pessimistic assessment of the possibility of loyal dissent as such. The events of 1610 had put considerable pressure on the sort of compromise that Jonson himself had practised in the preceding years. Tellingly, the year of Jonson’s re-conversion to Protestantism also saw Wright’s final departure from England, ‘probably convinced that his long years of cooperation and concessions to the Government had proved fruitless’.Footnote 139 Wright’s project of semi-conformity had failed, leaving only the choice between martyrdom and conversion, whether sincere or not. As Jonson too suggests in his portrayal of Busy, who falls from one extreme into the other, there is no middle ground.
It is no coincidence that Busy finally converts during the performance of a puppet play, the climax of the fair’s entertainments. In fact, the notion of Christian liberty in things indifferent and its Scriptural foundations in the Pauline corpus are equally central to debates on the legitimacy of the theatre as they are to debates on outward conformity. Jonson neatly combines the two issues in Busy’s seditious defiance of royal authority towards the end of the play. The play thus offers a paradigmatic instance of the close associations between early modern conceptions of theatricality and debates on outward conformity, which I have traced throughout this entire book.
Because of the theatre’s origins in Pagan sacrificial ritual, anti-theatrical writers such as Stephen Gosson argued that ‘suche men as are erectors of Stage Playes among Christians … communicate with the sacrifices and idolatry of the Gentiles’.Footnote 140 Hence, going to the theatre is ‘Apostacy’Footnote 141 – or at least an illicit form of Nicodemism, which violates the imperative ‘to avoide euery thing that hindereth the outwarde profession of Christianitie’.Footnote 142 Notably, even Gosson has to admit that plays ‘are nawghte of them selues’,Footnote 143 just as Paul had declared that ‘an idol is nothing in the worlde’ (1 Cor. 8:4) and that the eating of sacrificial meats technically falls within the scope of Christian liberty. Like Puritan nonconformists, however, Gosson protests that ‘the outward vse of things indifferent, as meats, [is] to be tied to the rule of charitie, and not to be taken, when they offende the consience [sic] of the weake’.Footnote 144 While few critics were as explicit as Gosson in tying the question of outward conformity to the question of the legitimacy of playgoing, the same Pauline language and argumentation is omnipresent in debates on the legitimacy of the theatre. John Northbrooke, for instance, argues that even if the theatre were indifferent, one ought to refrain ‘also from such things as might bee called indifferent, partly least anye of the weaker christians shoulde be corrupted’.Footnote 145 As in Busy’s concern not to offend the weak brethren, the criterion of edification or offence, respectively, clinches the argument. In his Vertues Common-wealth (1603), Henry Crosse likewise concedes that plays ‘are not simply forbidden in expresse words’ in Scripture, but nonetheless wishes ‘to thrust them out as things indifferent, and make them simply vnlawfull’.Footnote 146 With reference to 1 Cor. 8, Crosse notes: ‘If indifferent things giue offence to the weake, they ought to bee remooued: for the freedome of those things giueth courage to the defect of grace, to be more vngracious’.Footnote 147
In turn, apologists of the theatre pointed out that Scripture does not explicitly condemn the theatre. Thus, Thomas Heywood asks why Christ and his apostles ‘were content to passe them ouer, as things tollerated, and indifferent’, and condemns ‘over-scrupulous heads’, who ‘carpe at that, against which they cannot finde any text in the sacred Scriptures’.Footnote 148 Heywood’s argument is picked up by the actor and playwright Nathan Field, son of the Puritan leader John Field and Jonson’s protegé. In a letter from 1616, Field points out that ‘in God’s whole volume (which I have studied as my best part) I find not any trade of life except conjurers, sorceres, and witches, ipso facto damned; nay, not expressly spoken against, but only the abuses and bad uses of them’.Footnote 149
Despite Jonson’s merciless ridicule of Busy’s anti-theatrical invective, the play as a whole suggests that there actually is something to the anti-theatrical concern with idolatry. Busy’s conversion, or apostasy, during the performance of a puppet play confirms the fear of idolatrous pollution that was voiced by anti-Nicodemite polemicists. Anti-theatrical writers such as the author (Munday?) of A second and third blast of retrait from plaies and Theaters likewise frequently point out the theatre’s powers to corrupt actors as well as spectators: ‘It is maruelous to consider how the gesturing of a plaier, which Tullie termeth the eloquence of the bodie, is of force to moue, and prepare a man to that which is il’.Footnote 150 Therefore, ‘[t]here commeth much euil in at the eares, but more at the eies, by these two open windowes death breaketh into the soule’.Footnote 151 Gosson rehearses the same concerns in the language of idolatry and religious purity that is so prominent in anti-Nicodemite literature: ‘yf we be carefull that no pollution of idoles enter by the mouth into our bodies, how dilligent, how circumspect, how wary ought we to be, that no corruption of idols, enter by the passage of our eyes & eares into the soule?’.Footnote 152
Busy similarly warns against the temptation of vision and, like Gosson and A second and third blast, to a somewhat lesser degree, against the temptation of sound. Arriving at the fair, Busy urges his company to avoid its attractions as best as they can: ‘So, walk on in the middle way, foreright; turn neither to the right hand nor to the left; let not your eyes be drawn aside with vanity nor your ear with noises’ (3.2.24–6).Footnote 153 The fair is, like the theatre, a contagious spectacle whose visual powers of infection are to be avoided at all costs. Initially, Busy repeatedly warns his company with exhortations such as ‘Look not toward them, hearken not’ (3.2.32),Footnote 154 or ‘you must not look nor turn towards them’ (3.2.36–7).Footnote 155 Dame Purecraft admonishes her son-in-law John Littlewit in similar terms: ‘Son, were you not warned of the vanity of the eye?’ (3.2.57).Footnote 156 Jonson is likely alluding to The vanitie of the eie (1608) by George Hakewill, the brother of William Hakewill, Jonson’s friend and a fellow-member of the Mermaid Club.Footnote 157 In The vanitie of the eie, Hakewill anticipates both Busy’s obsession with idolatry and his opposition to the theatre. For instance, Hakewill discusses ‘Howe Idolatry hath a kinde of necessarie dependance vppon the eie’ (title of ch. 2)Footnote 158 and argues that ‘the popish religion consistes more in eie-seruice then the reformed’ (title of ch. 25).Footnote 159 This iconophobic stance also informs Hakewill’s objections to the theatre. Thus, plays ‘tie the eie in such manner vnto them, as they withdrawe the minde from the contemplation of [God’s] glorie’.Footnote 160 Moreover, the theatre also exerts a corrupting influence on the specators’ morals. As Hakewill asserts with reference to the church father John Chrysostome, ‘whiles thou accustomest thy selfe to see such spectacles, insensibly, & by degrees, bidding adue to shame & modestie, thou beginnest to entertaine and practise the same’.Footnote 161 The boundary between inwardness and outwardness is, as Busy would agree, nowhere more precarious than in vision.
If the eyes are the gateway to external corruption, vision poses a fundamental threat to Busy’s tenet in Bartholomew Fair that ‘we may be religious in midst of the profane’ (1.6.59).Footnote 162 But, of course, Littlewit has a point when he protests that one cannot just navigate through the fair with eyes closed: ‘how shall we find a pig, if we do not look about for’t? Will it run off o’the spit into our mouths, think you, as in Lubberland, and cry, “Wee, wee”?’ (3.2.59–61).Footnote 163 Hence, it does not take long until the company succumbs to the temptations of Smithfield. Remarkably, seeing turns out to be just as pleasurable as eating, recalling Gosson’s warning that the ‘passage of our eyes & eares’ is even more susceptible to idolatrous pollution than ‘the mouth’.Footnote 164 For instance, Littlewit tells his wife that she ‘may long to see as well as to taste’ (3.6.10)Footnote 165 and to ‘[l]ook, Win, do, look, a God’s name, and save your longing. Here be fine sights’ (3.6.48–9).Footnote 166 Busy’s temptation is likewise as much visual as it is gastronomic: ‘He eats with his eyes, as well as his teeth’ (3.6.40).Footnote 167 Busy’s conversion thus already begins with his mere presence at the fair, where ‘[i]dolatry peepeth out on every side’ (3.6.36) and inevitably pollutes its onlookers.Footnote 168 When Busy announces that he ‘will become a beholder’ (5.5.93) after the completion of his conversion, he merely concludes a process that was initiated much earlier.Footnote 169
Even though Jonson ridicules Busy’s vociferous condemnations of idolatry and the theatre, the Puritan’s worries turn out to be quite justified. In addition, Jonson’s portrayal of his eventual assimilation into society at large in the language of theatrical corruption and the dangers of (semi-)conformity renders this process highly ambivalent. On the one hand, the theatre’s powers of temptation, especially through its visual appeal, may have allowed Jonson to conceptualise it as an institution that undermined sectarianism and promoted an inclusive stance towards religious unity, as Jeffrey Knapp has suggested.Footnote 170 Some apologists of the theatre did indeed highlight the theatre’s transformative powers, its ability to convert its spectators, one is tempted to say, which they flaunted as proof of the theatre’s moral salubrity. As Heywood puts it, ‘so bewitching a thing is liuely and well spirited action, that it hath power to new mold the harts of the spectators’.Footnote 171 On the other hand, critics such as Huston Diehl and Michael O’Connell have shown that playwrights such as Marlowe, Shakespeare, and Jonson displayed a heightened sensibility and ambivalence towards the visual medium of the theatre and its impact on its audiences.Footnote 172 Even Heywood seems ambivalent about the theatre’s powers of transformation when he describes them as ‘bewitching’, and such unease with the theatre’s powers to undermine self-determination is also palpable in Jonson’s comedy.Footnote 173
The manner in which the theatre united its spectators in a shared bond of community was especially problematic for religious dissenters. During his years as a Catholic, for instance, Jonson faced the challenge of demarcating and maintaining a sense of religious identity that set him apart from the larger communities with which he nonetheless interacted on a daily basis. As I have argued in Chapter 5, one way in which religious dissenters could conceptualise such a demarcation was with reference to neo-Stoicist conceptions of selfhood, which allow for a radical split between inward and outward self. However, the viability of such a double self seems much more questionable in Bartholomew Fair, which gives its due to the concerns of religious nonconformists. Jonson’s characterisation of the theatre’s transformative powers in the language of anti-theatrical and anti-Nicodemite discourses arguably betrays not only a deep-seated scepticism towards the manner in which the theatre could subvert its spectators’ inward sovereignty and sense of selfhood but also a concomitant, residual nonconformist sensibility, an acute awareness of the difficulties of remaining ‘religious in midst of the profane’, with which Catholics wrestled just as much as Puritans.
Authority and Judgement
In the epilogue for the court performance, Jonson ties his concern with religious conformity even closer to the theatre. Bartholomew Fair can be read as a portrayal of abused Christian liberty, a failure of the Puritan characters in particular ‘to obserue a meane that there may be a difference betweene libertie and lycence’,Footnote 174 which questions the viability of Presbyterian self-government and makes apparent the need for the strong hand of authority in the form of an episcopal polity under royal supremacy. The epilogue spells out this argument more explicitly – but with respect to the theatre, which, as a thing indifferent, is likewise in need of moderation.
In the light of the danger that players might turn the ‘leave’ that is ‘given them’Footnote 175 into ‘licence’,Footnote 176 Jonson’s epilogue grants the privilege to decide on the scope of the theatre’s liberty entirely to the King, who ‘[c]an tell / if we have used that leave you gave us well, / Or whether we to rage or licence break’.Footnote 177 Jonson emphatically states: ‘This is your power to judge, great sir, and not / The envy of a few’.Footnote 178 As Creaser notes, the play’s court performance was presumably staged in the Banqueting House, ‘the King’s audience-chamber and place of state and judgement’,Footnote 179 which makes Jonson’s deferral to James’ judgement particularly pertinent. Jonson thus extends his Erastian claim for the royal ‘charge’ of ‘all things divine’ to the realm of literature,Footnote 180 acknowledging James’ triple office as king, priest, and poet.Footnote 181 In his attack on the theatre, Busy therefore blatantly disregards the King’s prerogative to judge things indifferent, not only in religious but also in theatrical affairs.
Like the anti-theatrical writers cited earlier in this chapter, in Bartholomew Fair Busy styles his attack on the stage as an attack on ‘that idol, that heathenish idol’ (5.5.4).Footnote 182 As Patrick Collinson has pointed out,Footnote 183 Busy’s rallying cry ‘Down with Dagon, down with Dagon!’ (5.5.1)Footnote 184 links him to a bill of complaint in the Star Chamber concerning a notorious iconoclastic episode in the Puritan stronghold Banbury, Busy’s hometown, on 26 July 1600.Footnote 185 Evidently, Jonson is at pains to align opposition to the theatre with Puritan disruption and sedition. When Leatherhead replies, ‘Sir, I present nothing but what is licensed by authority’ (5.5.11) and ‘I have the Master of the Revels’ hand for’t, sir’ (5.5.13),Footnote 186 Busy does not back down in deference to authority. On the contrary, he is just warming up and counters with great verve:
The Master of Rebels’ hand, thou hast: Satan’s! Hold thy peace: thy scurrility, shut up thy mouth. Thy profession is damnable, and in pleading for it thou dost plead for Baal. I have long opened my mouth wide, and gaped, I have gaped as the oyster for the tide after thy destruction, but cannot compass it by suit or dispute, so that I look for a bickering ere long, and then a battle.Footnote 187
By equating anti-theatricality with Puritan disregard for royal authority, Jonson shrewdly builds a case that brands any opposition to the theatre as sedition. Indeed, opposition to the stage inevitably implied opposition to the King, considering that James had practically established a royal monopoly over the theatre by taking four of the five acting companies in London under the patronage of the royal household.Footnote 188
Significantly, Busy’s condemnation of the theatre is inseparable from Puritan discontent with the government of the Church of England, not only in his iconoclastic attack on ‘Dagon’ but also in his threat of a ‘bickering’ and a ‘battle’. As Creaser has shown, Busy’s tirade is largely lifted from Richard Bancroft’s anthology of statements of Puritan sedition in Daungerous positions (1593).Footnote 189 Bancroft credits John Field with the following, seditious statement: ‘Tush, holde your peace: seeing we cannot compasse these things, by suite nor dispute: it is the multitude and people, that must bring them to passe’.Footnote 190 The second part of Busy’s threat is provided by Giles Wigginton, whom we have already encountered as the hapless victim of the ‘zealous pursuivant’ Munday: ‘wee look for some bickering ere long, and then a battel: which cannot long endure’.Footnote 191 Both statements are combined in Bartholomew Fair in Busy’s threat: ‘[I] cannot compass [thy destruction] by suit or dispute, so that I look for a bickering ere long, and then a battle’ (5.5.17–18).Footnote 192 Of course, Jonson thoroughly deflates the anti-Puritan paranoia from the 1590s with his satirical portrayal of Busy’s seditious rage against puppet players. Omitting Field’s more serious threat of a popular uprising by the ‘multitude and people’, Busy is reduced to a Quixotic, lone warrior against the fair’s idolatries. Nonetheless, this invocation of Puritan sedition in the sphere of the theatre makes clear that Busy’s refusal to acknowledge royal authority over the theatre is part and parcel of the more general nonconformist refusal to acknowledge royal authority over things indifferent, also in matters of religion.
To be sure, the following ‘disputation’ (5.5.24)Footnote 193 between Busy and the Puppet Dionysius is nothing ‘but hinnying sophistry’ (5.5.51).Footnote 194 Busy’s charge that ‘thou hast no calling’ (5.5.38) is deflected with specious wordplay: ‘You lie! I am called Dionysius’ (5.5.39).Footnote 195 Eventually, the debate over the profanity of the theatre degenerates into a mere shouting match:
Puppet Dionysius. It is not profane!
Leatherhead. It is not profane, he says.
Busy. It is profane.
Puppet Dionysius. It is not profane.
Busy. It is profane.
Puppet Dionysius. It is not profane.Footnote 196
Some of Jonson’s contemporaries perceived that more was at stake in this disputation than just the theatre. Jonson’s friend John Selden read the scene as an allegory of religious controversy: ‘Ben Jonson satirically expressed the vain disputes of divines by Rabbi Busy disputing with a puppet in his Bartholomew Fair. It is so: it is not so: it is so: it is not so; crying thus one to another a quarter of an hour together’.Footnote 197 Without the lack of an authoritarian decision, there is no way to end the debate: ‘One says one thing, and another another; and there is, I say, no measure to end the controversy’.Footnote 198 Ever since the dispute between Luther and Erasmus, this had been the classic Catholic argument against the relativist implications of sola scriptura.Footnote 199 However, Jonson’s play suggests that an appeal to royal supremacy might resolve the dispute – if only Busy could acknowledge that the play is ‘licensed by authority’. Similarly, Seldon draws explicitly Erastian conclusions from the exegetical impasse which he perceived to be allegorised in the disputation: ‘Question. Whether is the church or the scripture judge of Religion? Answer. In truth neither, but the state’.Footnote 200 Again, Jonson’s submission of the theatre to royal judgement is closely aligned to the claim for royal supremacy over church government.
Nonetheless, Leatherhead/Dionysius eventually does win the debate when he answers the charge that cross-dressing is prohibited by Mosaic Law.Footnote 201 As Dionysius points out, puppets do not have a gender, which Dionysius proves when it lifts its garments and cites Gal. 3:28: ‘we have neither male nor female amongst us’ (5.5.83).Footnote 202 It is only then that Busy admits defeat: ‘I am confuted; the Cause hath failed me’ (5.5.90).Footnote 203 Ironically, Dionysius’ argument echoes the radicalism of his Puritan opponent, as can be gathered from the full verse which Dionysius cites: ‘There is nether Iewe nor Grecian: there is nether bonde nor fre: there is nether male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Iesus’ (Gal. 3:28). Just as Busy declares his Christian liberty and refutes the charge of Judaising by eating pig, a practical affirmation of Paul’s claim that ‘[t]here is nether Iewe nor Grecian’, the puppet reveals its Christian liberty by lifting its garments, thus demonstrating Paul’s claim that ‘there is nether male nor female’.Footnote 204 In a striking parody of his Puritan opponent, Dionysius goes on to declare that ‘I speak by inspiration as well as he’ (5.5.88) and that ‘I have as little to do with learning as he’ (5.5.88–9),Footnote 205 which is, in a meta-theatrical sense, equally true for the puppet as its transcendence of the gender binary. In this farcical, meta-theatrical appropriation of the Puritans’ insistence on Christian liberty and their alleged spiritualism, Jonson reduces Busy’s attack on the puppet play ad absudum. The Puritan is beaten with his own weapons.Footnote 206
Compelle Intrare
As I have argued in this chapter, Bartholomew Fair draws attention to a considerable overlap between debates on religious conformity and the theatre’s legitimacy, insofar as both are concerned with their status in relation to idolatry and Christian liberty. In his deference to the King’s ‘power to judge’ plays, Jonson explicitly spells out with respect to the theatre what he exemplifies with respect to religion throughout the whole play, namely, the need to prevent liberty from degenerating into licentiousness. Moreover, Bartholomew Fair establishes a concrete connection between the two issues in the person of Busy, who not only arrogates authority to himself in matters of religion in his claims to inspiration and prophecy but also disregards the royal prerogative to license or ban plays in his anti-theatrical riot in the fair. The play’s literary politics are thus intricately related to its religious politics.
Bartholomew Fair may trivialise many of the concerns about religious dissent voiced by Elizabethan and Jacobean opponents of religious toleration and reproduced in the plays discussed so far. In Bartholomew Fair, inward dissent is no longer perceived to be a threat to political stability, and those who make it their business to spy on others, such as Justice Overdo, are ridiculed for their obsession with imaginary seminary priests and other ‘enormities’. Self-proclaimed martyrs are not dangerous subversives, but deluded at best. Jonson, one might argue, lowers the stakes of religious conflict by transposing it into a comic register. Nonetheless, I have argued that the inclusive stance of Jonson’s comedy has often been mistaken for a tolerant impulse. G. M. Pinciss believes that Jonson propagates a ‘liberal position’ with ‘profounder, Christian implications’,Footnote 207 and Shuger observes that the play offers a lesson in ‘cosmic humility’, where ‘the hypocrites must throw off their oversized masks and (like true Christians) sit down to dinner with thieves and publicans’.Footnote 208 Similarly, Brian Walsh concludes that ‘inclusiveness is enabled by a leveling effect produced by the revelation of a spectrum of Puritan behavior, whereby the sins of Puritans are gradually revealed to blend into a more generalized portrait of human misdoing’.Footnote 209 However, Quarlous’ reminder in Bartholomew Fair that even Adam Overdo is but ‘flesh and blood’ (5.6.80)Footnote 210 is not only a gesture of humility but also a means of cutting the Puritans and their Presbyterian ambitions down to size.
Universal fallibility does not justify egalitarian politics. On the contrary, it calls for the strong hand of authority. As Shagan puts it, ‘the conformist position was based upon the premise that the Church was incapable of self-restraint and thus had to be moderated externally by magistrates who settled disputes and set firm rules to regulate adiaphora’.Footnote 211 By the same token, the integrative stance of Overdo’s invitation to supper at the end of the play is by no means a reconciliation on equal terms, but requires that the Puritans give up their spleen. The play is thus an instance of Ferrell’s observation that Jacobean anti-Puritan polemic ‘aimed at silencing the moderate Puritan voice within the Church’, and not just ‘the extreme sectarian voices outside it’.Footnote 212 The fragile social harmony at the end of Bartholomew Fair can likewise only persist if Busy keeps his mouth shut – which he does. The Puritan, who declared earlier that ‘I cannot be silent’ (3.6.61),Footnote 213 does not speak a single line after his defeat.
When Overdo invites the whole company to supper, he cites the Pauline verse (2 Cor. 13:10) that is so crucial to the debate between Puritans and conformists and that James had already quoted in his address to parliament in 1610: ‘[F]or my intents are ad correctionem, non ad destructionem; ad aedificandum, non ad diruendum’ (5.6.93–4).Footnote 214 Edification was the decisive criterion for the Puritans in the question of whether Christian liberty licensed conformity or required a stand of nonconformity. Far from advancing ‘an ostensibly generous philosophy of moral healing’,Footnote 215 the characterisation of the secular magistrate as an agent of edification therefore amounts to an Erastian coup. By claiming edification as the prerogative of the secular magistrate, Overdo and James countermine the nonconformist appeal to edification as a criterion for rejecting royal supremacy. Hence, the Jacobean appeal to edification does not imply ‘a more tolerant policy in matters of religion’.Footnote 216 On the contrary, James cites Paul in his 1610 speech to Parliament in the context of a reassertion of his royal power, which also includes his right to ‘apply sharpe cures, or cut off corrupt members, let blood in what proportion [he] thinkes fit, and as the body may spare’.Footnote 217 When James ordered that ‘the rotten contagious member’, the anti-Trinitarian Bartholomew Legate, ‘be cut off from the church of Christ’,Footnote 218 he demonstrably had no scruples about asserting his right to do so, even if the legality of the procedure was controversial.
If ‘[t]he social reassimilation of the Puritans in Bartholomew Fair offers a more hopeful vision than that found in Jonson’s earlier comedy The Alchemist’,Footnote 219 we may therefore have to ask for whom. Much criticism of the play rests on the implicit assumption that ‘absolute religious segregation’Footnote 220 is a sign of intolerance and that Jonson’s alleged ‘desire to break down sectarian walls’Footnote 221 is, in turn, a tolerant impulse. However, when revisiting the intuitively liberal connotations of terms such as ‘Christian liberty’ and ‘moderation’ and recovering their authoritarian ideological uses, Bartholomew Fair appears to offer a far more intolerant take on religious dissent than has usually been recognised. The play’s ridicule of martyrdom as deluded religious fanaticism with no grounding in a society that has transcended the bloody persecutions of the past is not to be taken at face value, but needs to be understood in the context of Jacobean attempts to devalue Catholic resistance to the Oath of Allegiance. While plays such as The Jew of Malta embody an exclusive form of intolerance by demonising, exposing, and punishing dissenters on stage, the intolerance of Bartholomew Fair can be characterised as inclusive in its pointed refusal to acknowledge the moral and spiritual stakes of religious dissent and its simultaneous insistence that dissenters be integrated into society at large. If there is a dominating image for the play’s religious politics, it is Jesus’ banquet parable (Luke 14:12–24), especially his command compelle intrare (compel them to come in), which has ever been the watchword of outward conformity since Augustine cited it in his conflict with the Donatists and which is re-enacted in the conclusion of Bartholomew Fair.Footnote 222
Despite its inclusive and apparently welcoming character, such hospitality remains a mode of coercion, as Hooker makes all too clear in his application of the banquet parable to religious dissent: ‘what cause have wee given the world to thinke that we are not readie … to use any good meane of sweet compulsion to have this high and heavenly banquet larglie furnished?’.Footnote 223 Indeed, James came to prefer ‘sweet compulsion’ over the Foucauldian ‘liturgy of punishment’.Footnote 224 As Busy’s conversion in Bartholomew Fair suggests, the theatre, with its corrosive effect on nonconformity, might just be such a form of ‘sweet compulsion’ – a form of non-violent social discipline that undermines its spectators’ inward sovereignty even while appealing to an inclusive sense of liberty from Puritan stricture. Fittingly, therefore, Bartholomew Cokes wishes to ‘ha’ the rest o’ the play’ (5.6.95)Footnote 225 in the communal and inclusive setting of Overdo’s edifying dinner party, who ‘will have none fear to go along’ (5.6.92–3).Footnote 226 And, since Bartholomew Fair is a comedy, go along they must.