This article which Chas shared a couple days ago, for a number of reasons, is an important article to read, and absorb. Not least of which is it provides some “sound” historical knowledge which is in such short (extinct?) supply today. But more importantly, for the emphasis this writer places on the need of understanding “political thought" (political theory) to understand history, and even more crucial, to understand the “present.” At the end of this very informative article, however, the author himself adopts the “Whig” interpretation of history, as I point out in a note at the end of this. But apart from that, this is important article to read as actual “historical information,” for a population starved of such information, especially Regnery Publishing readers with its many “campaign literature” books, being presented as “substantive history.” To include one particularly egregious book on Andrew Jackson, as The American Conservative’s Hillsdale College “Scholar at Large” wrote, and admitted later that it was solicited by Regnery as a contribution to Trump’s reelection campaign, in 2019 or 2020. And of course celebrated in The American Conservative, which this issue is dedicated to the celebration, and “sanitizing,” of British and Belgian colonialism, and how “benign” they both were.
But here are some important points in the article below in my opinion, which show the absolute need of understanding “political theory,” to understand what “informs” ideology, and ideologists. "The point of Jonathan Healey’s new book, “The Blazing World” (Knopf), is to acknowledge all the complexities of the episode but still to see it as a real revolution of political thought—to recapture a lost moment when a radically democratic commonwealth seemed possible. Such an account, as Healey recognizes, confronts formidable difficulties. For one thing, any neat sorting of radical revolutionaries and conservative loyalists comes apart on closer examination: many of the leading revolutionaries of Oliver Cromwell’s “New Model” Army were highborn; many of the loyalists were common folk who wanted to be free to have a drink on Sunday, celebrate Christmas, and listen to a fiddler in a pub. (All things eventually restricted by the Puritans in power.)
. . . "It was a clash of ideologies, as often as not between members of the same class.” Admiring the insurgents, Healey rejects the notion that they were little elves of economic necessity. Their ideas preceded and shaped the way that they perceived their class interests. Indeed, like the “phlegmatic” and “choleric” humors of medieval medicine, “the bourgeoisie” can seem a uselessly encompassing category, including merchants, bankers, preachers, soldiers, professionals, and scientists. Its members were passionate contestants on both sides of the fight, and on some sides no scholar has yet dreamed of.
. . . "Reading lives of both Charles and Cromwell, one can only recall Alice’s sound verdict on the Walrus and the Carpenter: that they were both very unpleasant characters.” (TP-that’s not limited to a pair of “unpleasant characters,” see the current contenders for POTUS, and the many militarist factions of U.S. politics, from our founding, but particularly since WW II!)
That’s where the need of knowing “political theory” arises, to make sound and astute “distinctions” between political actors to anticipate where their “ideas” actually lead. As would have been helpful in the 1920’s and 1930’s, and in the post-WW II period as written of in a few books with titles such as “The Making of the Cold War Enemy,” to understand how the U.S. was “conditioned” in a way leading inexorably to the present U.S. National Security State, and Perpetual War. Fully explained in the "ideas” promulgated by Militarist ideologists, to create a “Climate of “Opinion” (as it was called then) conducive to the Military Industrial Complex then coming into existence under the influence of these same ideologists (ok, the “Conservative Movement’s” ideology and ideologists.”
On Apr 21, 2023, at 8:46 AM, Chas Freeman via Salon <salon@listserve.com> wrote:
Amid the pageantry (and the horrible family intrigue)
of the approaching coronation, much will be said about the endurance of
the British monarchy through the centuries, and perhaps less about how
the first King Charles ended his reign: by having his head
chopped off in public while the people cheered or gasped. The first
modern revolution, the English one that began in the sixteen-forties,
which replaced a monarchy with a republican commonwealth, is not exactly
at the forefront of our minds. Think of the American Revolution and you
see pop-gun battles and a diorama of eloquent patriots and outwitted
redcoats; think of the French Revolution and you see the guillotine and
the tricoteuses, but also the Declaration of the Rights of Man.
Think of the English Revolution that preceded both by more than a
century and you get a confusion of angry Puritans in round hats and
likable Cavaliers in feathered ones. Even a debate about nomenclature
haunts it: should the struggles, which really spilled over many decades,
be called a revolution at all, or were they, rather, a set of civil
wars? According to the “Whig” interpretation of
history—as it is called, in tribute to the Victorian historians who
believed in it—ours is a windup world,regularly ticking forward, that
was always going to favor the emergence of a constitutional monarchy,
becoming ever more limited in power as the people grew in education and
capacity. And so the core seventeenth-century conflict was a
constitutional one, between monarchical absolutism and parliamentary
democracy, with the real advance marked by the Glorious Revolution, and
the arrival of limited monarchy, in 1688. For the great Marxist
historians of the postwar era, most notably Christopher Hill, the main
action had to be parsed in class terms: a feudal class in decline, a
bourgeois class in ascent—and, amid the tectonic grindings between the
two, the heartening, if evanescent, appearance of genuine social
radicals. Then came the more empirically minded revisionists,
conservative at least as historians, who minimized ideology and saw the
civil wars as arising from the inevitable structural difficulties faced
by a ruler with too many kingdoms to subdue and too little money to do
it with.
The point of Jonathan Healey’s new book, “The Blazing World”
(Knopf), is to acknowledge all the complexities of the episode but
still to see it as a real revolution of political thought—to recapture a
lost moment when a radically democratic commonwealth seemed possible.
Such an account, as Healey recognizes, confronts formidable
difficulties. For one thing, any neat sorting of radical revolutionaries
and conservative loyalists comes apart on closer examination: many of
the leading revolutionaries of Oliver Cromwell’s “New Model” Army were
highborn; many of the loyalists were common folk who wanted to be free
to have a drink on Sunday, celebrate Christmas, and listen to a fiddler
in a pub. (All things eventually restricted by the Puritans in power.) Something
like this is always true. Revolutions are won by coalitions and only
then seized by fanatics. There were plenty of blue bloods on the
sansculottes side of the French one, at least at the beginning, and the
American Revolution joined abolitionists with slaveholders. One of the
most modern aspects of the English Revolution was Cromwell’s campaign
against the Irish Catholics after his ascent to power; estimates of the
body count vary wildly, but it is among the first organized genocides on
record, resembling the Young Turks’ war against the Armenians. Irish
loyalists, forced to take refuge in churches, were burned alive inside
them. Healey,
a history don at Oxford, scants none of these things. A New Model
social historian, he writes with pace and fire and an unusually sharp
sense of character and humor. At one emotional pole, he introduces us to
the visionary yet perpetually choleric radical John Lilburne, about
whom it was said, in a formula that would apply to many of his spiritual
heirs, that “if there were none living but himself John would be
against Lilburne, and Lilburne against John.” At the opposite pole,
Healey draws from obscurity the mild-mannered polemicist William Walwyn,
who wrote pamphlets with such exquisitely delicate titles as “A Whisper
in the Ear of Mr Thomas Edward” and “Some Considerations Tending to the
Undeceiving of Those, Whose Judgements Are Misinformed.” (TP-what an understatement it is to say how necessary that is today!) For
Hill, the clashes of weird seventeenth-century religious beliefs were
mere scrapings of butter on the toast of class conflict. If people argue
over religion, it is because religion is an extension of power; the
squabbles about pulpits are really squabbles about politics. Against
this once pervasive view, Healey declares flatly, “The Civil War wasn’t a
class struggle. It was a clash of ideologies, as often as not between
members of the same class.” Admiring the insurgents, Healey rejects the
notion that they were little elves of economic necessity. Their ideas
preceded and shaped the way that they perceived their class interests.
Indeed, like the “phlegmatic” and “choleric” humors of medieval
medicine, “the bourgeoisie” can seem a uselessly encompassing category,
including merchants, bankers, preachers, soldiers, professionals, and
scientists. Its members were passionate contestants on both sides of the
fight, and on some sides no scholar has yet dreamed of. Healey
insists, in short, that what seventeenth-century people seemed to be
arguing about is what they were arguing about. When members of the
influential Fifth Monarchist sect announced that Charles’s death was a
signal of the Apocalypse, they really meant it: they thought the Lord
was coming, not the middle classes. With the eclectic, wide-angle vision
of the new social history, Healey shows that ideas and attitudes,
rhetoric and revelations, rising from the ground up, can drive social
transformation. Ripples on the periphery of our historical vision can be
as important as the big waves at the center of it. The mummery of
signatures and petitions and pamphlets which laid the ground for
conflict is as important as troops and battlefield terrain. In the
spirit of E. P. Thompson, Healey allows members of the “lunatic fringe”
to speak for themselves; the Levellers, the Ranters, and the
Diggers—radicals who cried out in eerily prescient ways for democracy
and equality—are in many ways the heroes of the story, though not
victorious ones. But so are people who do not fit
neatly into tales of a rising merchant class and revanchist feudalists.
Women, shunted to the side in earlier histories of the era, play an
important role in this one. We learn of how neatly monarchy recruited
misogyny, with the Royalist propaganda issuing, Rush Limbaugh style,
derisive lists of the names of imaginary women radicals, more
frightening because so feminine: “Agnes Anabaptist, Kate
Catabaptist . . . Penelope Punk, Merald Makebate.” The title of Healey’s
book is itself taken from a woman writer, Margaret Cavendish, whose
astonishing tale “The Description of a New World, Called the Blazing
World” was a piece of visionary science fiction that summed up the
dreams and disasters of the century. Healey even reports on what might
be a same-sex couple among the radicals: the preacher Thomas Webbe took
one John Organ for his “man-wife.” What
happened in the English Revolution, or civil wars, took an exhaustingly
long time to unfold, and its subplots were as numerous as the bits of
the Shakespeare history play the wise director cuts. Where the French
Revolution proceeds in neat, systematic French parcels—Revolution,
Terror, Directorate, Empire, etc.—the English one is a mess, exhausting
to untangle and not always edifying once you have done so. There’s a
Short Parliament, a Long Parliament, and a Rump Parliament to
distinguish, and, just as one begins to make sense of the English
squabbles, the dour Scots intervene to further muddy the story. In
essence, though, what happened was that the Stuart monarchy, which,
after the death of Elizabeth, had come to power in the person of the
first King James, of Bible-version fame, got caught in a kind of
permanent political cul-de-sac. When James died, in 1625, he left his
kingdom to his none too bright son Charles. Parliament was then, as now,
divided into Houses of Lords and Commons, with the first representing
the aristocracy and the other the gentry and the common people. The
Commons, though more or less elected, by uneven means, served
essentially at the King’s pleasure, being summoned and dismissed at his
will. Parliament
did, however, have the critical role of raising taxes, and, since the
Stuarts were both war-hungry and wildly incompetent, they needed cash
and credit to fight their battles, mainly against rebellions in Scotland
and Ireland, with one disastrous expedition into France. Although the
Commons as yet knew no neat party divides, it was, in the nature of the
times, dominated by Protestants who often had a starkly Puritan and
always an anti-papist cast, and who suspected, probably wrongly, that
Charles intended to take the country Catholic. All of this was happening
in a time of crazy sectarian religious division, when, as the Venetian
Ambassador dryly remarked, there were in London “as many religions as
there were persons.” Healey tells us that there were “reports of naked
Adamites, of Anabaptists and Brownists, even Muslims and ‘Bacchanalian’
pagans.” In the midst of all that ferment,
mistrust and ill will naturally grew between court and Parliament, and
between dissident factions within the houses of Parliament. In January,
1642, the King entered Parliament and tried to arrest a handful of its
more obnoxious members; tensions escalated, and Parliament passed the
Militia Ordinance, awarding itself the right to raise its own fighting
force, which—a significant part of the story—it was able to do with what
must have seemed to the Royalists frightening ease, drawing as it could
on the foundation of the London civic militia. The King, meanwhile,
raised a conscript army of his own, which was ill-supplied and, Healey
says, “beset with disorder and mutiny.” By August, the King had
officially declared war on Parliament, and by October the first battle
began. A series of inconclusive wins and losses ensued over the next
couple of years. The
situation shifted when, in February, 1645, Parliament consolidated the
New Model Army, eventually under the double command of the aristocratic
Thomas Fairfax, about whom, one woman friend admitted, “there are
various opinions about his intellect,” and the grim country Protestant
Oliver Cromwell, about whose firm intellect opinions varied not.
Ideologically committed, like Napoleon’s armies a century later, and far
better disciplined than its Royalist counterparts, at least during
battle (they tended to save their atrocities for the after-victory
party), the New Model Army was a formidable and modern force. Healey,
emphasizing throughout how fluid and unpredictable class lines were,
makes it clear that the caste lines of manners were more marked. Though
Cromwell was suspicious of the egalitarian democrats within his
coalition—the so-called Levellers—he still declared, “I had rather have a
plain russet-coated captain that knows what he fights for, and loves
what he knows, than that which you call a gentleman.” Throughout the blurred action, sharp profiles of personality do emerge. Ronald Hutton’s marvellous “The Making of Oliver Cromwell”
(Yale) sees the Revolution in convincingly personal terms, with the
King and Cromwell as opposed in character as they were in political
belief. Reading lives of both Charles and Cromwell, one can only recall
Alice’s sound verdict on the Walrus and the Carpenter: that they were both
very unpleasant characters. Charles was, the worst thing for an
autocrat, both impulsive and inefficient, and incapable of seeing
reality until it was literally at his throat. Cromwell was cruel,
self-righteous, and bloodthirsty. Yet one is
immediately struck by the asymmetry between the two. Cromwell was a man
of talents who rose to power, first military and then political, through
the exercise of those talents; Charles was a king born to a king. It is
still astounding to consider, in reading the history of the civil wars,
that so much energy had to be invested in analyzing the character of
someone whose character had nothing to do with his position. But though
dynastic succession has been largely overruled in modern politics, it
still holds in the realm of business. And so we spend time thinking
about the differences, say, between George Steinbrenner and his son Hal,
and what that means for the fate of the Yankees, with the same nervous
equanimity that seventeenth-century people had when thinking about the
traits and limitations of an obviously dim-witted Royal Family. Although
Cromwell emerges from every biography as a very unlikable man, he was
wholly devoted to his idea of God and oddly magnetic in his ability to
become the focus of everyone’s attention. In times of war, we seek out
the figure who embodies the virtues of the cause and ascribe to him not
only his share of the credit but everybody else’s, too. Fairfax tended
to be left out of the London reports. He fought the better battles but
made the wrong sounds. That sentence of Cromwell’s about the plain
captain is a great one, and summed up the spirit of the time.
Indeed, the historical figure Cromwell most resembles is Trotsky, who
similarly mixed great force of character with instinctive skill at
military arrangements against more highly trained but less motivated
royal forces. Cromwell clearly had a genius for leadership, and also, at
a time when religious convictions were omnipresent and all-important,
for assembling a coalition that was open even to the more extreme
figures of the dissident side. Without explicitly endorsing any of their
positions, Cromwell happily accepted their support, and his ability to
create and sustain a broad alliance of Puritan ideologies was as central
to his achievement as his cool head with cavalry. Hutton
and Healey, in the spirit of the historians Robert Darnton and Simon
Schama—recognizing propaganda as primary, not merely attendant, to the
making of a revolution—bring out the role that the London explosion of
print played in Cromwell’s triumph. By 1641, Healey explains, “London
had emerged as the epicentre of a radically altered landscape of
news . . . forged on backstreet presses, sold on street corners and read
aloud in smoky alehouses.” This may be surprising; we associate the
rise of the pamphlet and the newspaper with a later era, the
Enlightenment. But just as, once speed-of-light communication is
possible, it doesn’t hugely matter if its vehicle is telegraphy or
e-mail, so, too, once movable type was available, the power of the press
to report and propagandize didn’t depend on whether it was produced
single sheet by single sheet or in a thousand newspapers at once. At
last, at the Battle of Naseby, in June, 1645, the well-ordered
Parliamentary forces won a pivotal victory over the royal forces.
Accident and happenstance aided the supporters of Parliament, but
Cromwell does seem to have been, like Napoleon, notably shrewd and
self-disciplined, keeping his reserves in reserve and throwing them into
battle only at the decisive moment. By the following year, Charles I
had been captured. As with Louis XVI, a century later, Charles was
offered a perfectly good deal by his captors—basically, to accept a form
of constitutional monarchy that would still give him a predominant
role—but left it on the table. Charles tried to escape and reimpose his
reign, enlisting Scottish support, and, during the so-called Second
Civil War, the bloodletting continued. In many
previous histories of the time, the battles and Cromwell’s subsequent
rise to power were the pivotal moments, with the war pushing a newly
created “middling class” toward the forefront. For Healey, as for the
historians of the left, the key moment of the story occurs instead in
Putney, in the fall of 1647, in a battle of words and wills that could
easily have gone a very different way. It was there that the General
Council of the New Model Army convened what Healey calls “one of the
most remarkable meetings in the whole of English history,” in which
“soldiers and civilians argued about the future of the constitution, the
nature of sovereignty and the right to vote.” The implicit case for
universal male suffrage was well received. “Every man that is to live
under a government ought first by his own consent to put himself under
that government,” Thomas Rainsborough, one of the radical captains,
said. By the end of a day of deliberation, it was agreed that the vote
should be extended to all men other than servants and paupers on relief.
The Agitators, who were in effect the shop stewards of the New Model
Army, stuck into their hatbands ribbons that read “England’s freedom and
soldier’s rights.” Very much in the manner of the British soldiers of
the Second World War who voted in the first Labour government, they
equated soldiery and equality. The democratic
spirit was soon put down. Officers, swords drawn, “plucked the papers
from the mutineers’ hats,” Healey recounts, and the radicals gave up.
Yet the remaining radicalism of the New Model Army had, in the fall of
1648, fateful consequences. The vengeful—or merely egalitarian—energies
that had been building since Putney meant that the Army objected to
Parliament’s ongoing peace negotiations with Charles. Instead, he was
tried for treason, the first time in human memory that this had happened
to a monarch, and, in 1649, he was beheaded. In the next few years,
Cromwell turned against Parliament, impatient with its slow pace, and
eventually staged what was in effect a coup to make himself dictator.
“Lord Protector” was the title Cromwell took, and then, in the way of
such things, he made himself something very like a king. Cromwell
won; the radicals had lost. The political thought of their time—however
passionate—hadn’t yet coalesced around a coherent set of ideas and
ideals that could have helped them translate those radical intuitions
into a persuasive politics. Philosophies count, and these hadn’t been,
so to speak, left to simmer on the Hobbes long enough: “Leviathan” was
four years off, and John Locke was only a teen-ager. The time was still
recognizably and inherently pre-modern. Even the
word “ideology,” favored by Healey, may be a touch anachronistic. The
American and the French Revolutions are both recognizably modern: they
are built on assumptions that we still debate today, and left and right,
as they were established then, are not so different from left and right
today. Whatever obeisance might have been made to the Deity, they were
already playing secular politics in a post-religious atmosphere. During
the English Revolution, by contrast, the most passionate ideologies at
stake were fanatic religious beliefs nurtured through two millennia of
Christianity. Those beliefs, far from being frosting on a cake of competing interests, were
the competing interests. The ability of seventeenth-century people to
become enraptured, not to say obsessed, with theological differences
that seem to us astonishingly minute is the most startling aspect of the
story. Despite all attempts to depict these as the mere cosmetic
covering of clan loyalties or class interests, those crazy-seeming
sectarian disputes were about what they claimed to be about. Men were
more likely to face the threat of being ripped open and having their
bowels burned in front of their eyes (as happened eventually to the
regicides) on behalf of a passionately articulated creed than they were
on behalf of an abstract, retrospectively conjured class. But,
then, perhaps every age has minute metaphysical disputes whose
profundity only that age can understand. In an inspired study of John
Donne, “Super-Infinite,”
the scholar Katherine Rundell points out how preoccupied her subject
was with the “trans-” prefix—transpose, translate,
transubstantiate—because it marked the belief that we are “creatures
born transformable.” The arguments over transubstantiation that consumed
the period—it would be the cause of the eventual unseating of Charles
I’s second son, King James II—echo in our own quarrels about identity
and transformation. Weren’t the nonconformist Puritans who exalted a
triune godhead simply insisting, in effect, on plural pronouns for the
Almighty? The baseline anxiety of human beings so often turns on
questions of how transformable we creatures are—on how it is that these
meat-and-blood bodies we live within can somehow become the sites of
spirit and speculation and grace, by which we include free will. These
issues of body and soul, however soluble they may seem in retrospect,
are the ones that cause societies to light up and sometimes conflagrate. History
is written by the victors, we’re told. In truth, history is written by
the romantics, as stories are won by storytellers. Anyone who can spin
lore and chivalry, higher calling and mystic purpose, from the ugliness
of warfare can claim the tale, even in defeat. As Ulysses S. Grant knew,
no army in history was as badly whipped as Robert E. Lee’s, and yet the
Confederates were still, outrageously, winning the history wars as late
as the opening night of “Gone with the Wind.” Though the
Parliamentarians routed the Cavaliers in the first big war, the
Cavaliers wrote the history—and not only because they won the later
engagement of the Restoration. It was also because the Cavaliers, for
the most part, had the better writers. Aesthetes may lose the local
battle; they usually win the historical war. Cromwell ruled as Lord
Protector for five years, and then left the country to his hapless son,
who was deposed in just one. Healey makes no bones about the truth that,
when the Commonwealth failed and Charles II gained the throne, in 1660,
for what became a twenty-five-year reign, it opened up a period of an
extraordinary English artistic renaissance. “The culture war, that we
saw at the start of the century,” he writes, “had been won. Puritanism
had been cast out. . . . Merry England was back.” There was
one great poet-propagandist for Cromwell, of course: John Milton, whose
“Paradise Lost” can be read as a kind of dreamy explication of
Cromwellian dissident themes. But Milton quit on Cromwell early, going
silent at his apogee, while Andrew Marvell’s poems in praise of Cromwell
are masterpieces of equivocation and irony, with Cromwell praised, the
King’s poise in dying admired, and in general a tone of wry hyperbole
turning into fatalism before the reader’s eyes. Marvell’s famously
conditional apothegm for Cromwell, “If these the times, then this must
be the man,” is as backhanded a compliment as any poet has offered a
ruler, or any flunky has ever offered a boss. Healey
makes the larger point that, just as the Impressionists rose, in the
eighteen-seventies, as a moment of repose after the internecine violence
of the Paris Commune, the matchless flowering of English verse and
theatre in the wake of the Restoration was as much a sigh of general
civic relief as a paroxysm of Royalist pleasure. The destruction of
things of beauty by troops under Cromwell’s direction is still shocking
to read of. At Peterborough Cathedral, they destroyed ancient
stained-glass windows, and in Somerset at least one Parliamentarian
ripped apart a Rubens. Yet, in Cromwell’s time,
certain moral intuitions and principles appeared that haven’t
disappeared; things got said that could never be entirely unsaid.
Government of the people resides in their own consent to be governed;
representative bodies should be in some way representative; whatever
rights kings have are neither divine nor absolute; and, not least,
religious differences should be settled by uneasy truces, if not
outright toleration. And so there is much to be
said for a Whig history after all, if not as a story of inevitably
incremental improvements then at least as one of incremental
inspirations. The Restoration may have had its glories, but a larger
glory belongs to those who groped, for a time, toward something freer
and better, and who made us, in particular—Americans, whose Founding
Fathers, from Roger Williams to the Quakers, leaped intellectually right
out of the English crucible—what we spiritually remain. America, on the
brink of its own revolution, was, essentially, London in the
sixteen-forties, set free then, and today still blazing. (TP- and then we’re right back to the Whig interpretation of history, as American Exceptionalism!) Published in the print edition of the April 24 & May 1, 2023, issue, with the headline “The Great Interruption.”
-- Salon mailing list Salon@listserve.com https://mlm2.listserve.net/mailman/listinfo/salon
|