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The Life and Raigne of King Edward the Sixth by John Hayward 1993, 208 pp
courtesy of our partner, Atlas Books |
From the Foreword:
Ever since the art of biography was perfected, royalty
has attracted biographers like so many bears to the honey pot. The attraction
derives from a threefold assumption: that sovereigns really do posess and
exercise power for good and evil; that their lives are somehow richer, more
intense, and more susceptible to corruption than those of common folk; and
that the “royal throne of kings” is always marketable. Seventeenth-century
writers would have added a fourth and, for them, more important element:
that history, especially the deeds and decisions of the rich and powerful,
was driven by a providential imperative which linked the past to the present
by ties of causation and analogy. History, therefore, contained a moral lesson
for the benefit of the living and was a mirror in which it could both discern
God’s purpose and comment upon itself. This last assumption gave to seventeenth-century
biography a polemical and contemporary flavor now lost to the twentieth century.
John Hayward and his generation of historical biographers and dramatists
were writing about figures and events that had contemporary impact. Their
works could be—indeed often were—censored, and the suspected hidden meaning
of their histories could land unwary authors in jail.
Like any biographer, John Hayward struggled with the dichotomy implicit in the title of his work, the tension between a Life and a Raigne. What was the proper balance between the two, and to what extent did one explain the other? In the case of Edward VI the equilibrium was hopelessly out of balance because the child king, who lived only sixteen years and reigned six years, five months and nine days, never had a chance to rule and thereby generate the documentary pieces that create the jigsaw puzzle of historica personality. For Hayward, Edward remained forever a two-dimensional stereotype of unrealized potentiality: “in disposition . . . mild, gracious and pleasant, of an heavenly wit; in body beautiful . . . a miracle of nature” that never reached maturity.
Hayward established what is still the standard approach to Edward’s reign—a study of divine-right kingship in which the powers of monarchy resided not in the head but in weak and corruptible servants surrounding the crown. Here was the making of tragedy both political and personal, and Hayward presents the reign as a three-act tragedy about Sir Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, Lord Protector of the realm, and senior uncle of the king. The “good duke” proved to be an easy morsel for the barracudas that circled about the child king, the most dangerous being John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, who was a master of dissimulation, always ready to instigate “any mischief” to attain his “ambitious ends.”
Authors who tell “sad stories of the death of kings” in an age which viewed history as a reflection of itself could get into serious trouble. Hayward discovered this when he was closely interrogated by Elizabeth's council for having dedicated his newly published Henrie IIII to the troublesome earl of Essex. Fortunately, he escaped with only a spell in the Tower of London by way of punishment for participating in the dangerous craft of history writing. He lived to complete his Life and Raigne of Edward Sixth, a piece of historical literature which, despite the advances of modern scholarship, still sets the flavor of a reign steeped in drama and personal tragedy.
—Lacey Baldwin Smith
Peter B. Ritzma Professor in the Humanities
Northwestern University