Chapter One
A poore man now arrived
at the Land of Promise
And the LORD magnified Solomon exceedingly in the sight of all
Israel, and bestowed upon him such royal maiestie as had not bene
on any king before him in Israel.
1 Chronicles 29:25
Few moments in English history have been more hungry for the future,
its mercurial possibilities and its hope of richness, than the
spring of 1603. At last the old, hesitant, querulous and
increasingly unapproachable Queen Elizabeth was dying. Nowadays, her
courtiers and advisers spent their lives tiptoeing around her moods
and her unpredictability. Lurching from one unaddressed financial
crisis to the next, selling monopolies to favourites, she had begun
to lose the affection of the country she had nurtured for so long.
Elizabeth, should have died years before. Most of her great men - Burleigh,
Leicester, Walsingham, even the beautiful Earl of Essex,
executed after a futile and chaotic rebellion in 1601 - had gone
already. She had become a relict of a previous age and her wrinkled,
pasteboard virginity now looked more like fruitlessness than purity.
Her niggardliness had starved the fountain of patronage on which the
workings of the country relied and those mechanisms, unoiled by the
necessary largesse, were creaking. Her exhausted impatience made the
process of government itself a labyrinth of tact and indirection.
The country felt younger and more vital than its queen. Cultural
conservatives might have bemoaned the death of old values and the
corruption of modern morals (largely from Italy, conceived of as a
louche and violent place), but these were not the symptoms of
decline. England was full of newness and potential: its population
burgeoning, its merchant fleets combing the world, London growing
like a hothouse plum, the sons of gentlemen crowding as never before
into the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge, plants and fruits from
all over the world arriving in its gardens and on its tables - but
the rigid carapace of the Elizabethan court lay like a cast-iron lid
above it. The queen's motto was still what it always had been:
Semper eadem, Always the same. She hadn't moved with the times. So
parsimonious had she been in elevating men to the peerage that by
the end of her reign there were no more than sixty peers in the
nobility of England. Scarcely a gentleman had been knighted by the
queen for years.
That drought of honours was a symptom of a kind of paralysis, an
indecisive rigidity. None of the great issues of the country had
been resolved. Inflation had transformed the economy but the Crown
was still drawing rents from its properties that had been set in the
1560s. The relationship between the House of Commons and the queen,
for all her wooing and flattery, had become angry, tetchy, full of
recrimination. The old war against Spain, which had achieved its
great triumph of defeating the Armada in 1588, had dragged on for
decades, haemorrhaging money and enjoying little support from the
Englishmen whose taxes were paying for it. The London and Bristol
merchants wanted only one outcome: an end to war, so that trade
could be resumed. Religious differences had been buried by the
Elizabethan regime: both Roman Catholics, who wanted England to
return to the fold of the Roman Church, and the more extreme,
`hotter' Protestants, the Puritans, who felt that the Reformation in
England had never been properly achieved, had been persecuted by the
queen and her church, fined, imprisoned and executed. Any questions
of change, tolerance or acceptance had not been addressed. Elizabeth
had survived by ignoring problems or suppressing them and as a
result England was a cauldron which had not been allowed to boil.
Later history - even in the seventeenth century itself - portrayed
Elizabeth's death as a dimming of the brilliance, the moment at
which England swopped a heroic, gallant, Renaissance freshness for
something more degenerate, less clean-cut, less noble, more
self-serving, less dignified. But that is almost precisely the
opposite of what England felt at the time. Elizabeth was passé,
decayed. A new king, with wife, children (Anne was pregnant with
their sixth child) an heir for goodness' sake, a passionate
huntsman, full of vigour, a poet, an intellectual of European
standing, a new king, a new reign and a new way of looking at the
world; of course the country longed for that. Elizabeth's death held
out the prospect of peace with Spain, a new openness to religious
toleration, and a resolution of the differences between the
established church and both Catholics and Puritans. More than we can
perhaps realise now, a change of monarch in an age of personal rule
meant not only a change of government and policy, but a change of
culture, attitude and belief. A new king meant a new world.
James Stuart was an unlikely hero: ugly, restless, red-haired,
pale-skinned, his tongue, it was said, too big for his mouth,
impatient, vulgar, clever, nervous. But his virtues, learned in the
brutal world of Scottish politics, were equal to the slurs of his
contemporaries. More than anything else he wanted and believed in
the possibilities of an encompassing peace. He adopted as his motto
the words from the Sermon on the Mount, Beati Pacifici, Blessed are
the Peacemakers, a phrase which, in the aftermath of a European
century in which the continent had torn itself apart in religious
war, would appear over and over again on Jacobean chimneypieces and
carved into oak testers and overmantels, crammed in alongside the
dreamed of, wish-fulfilment figures of Peace and Plenty, Ceres with
her overbrimming harvests and luscious breasts, Pax embracing
Concordia. The Bible that is named after James, and whose
translation was authorised by him, was central to his claim on that
ideal.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from God's Secretaries
by Adam Nicolson
Copyright © 2001 by HarperCollins Publishers
Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Copyright © 2001
HarperCollins Publishers
All right reserved.