***WHEN THE WORLD DID NOT
TURN UPSIDE DOWN-THE DEFEATED IN THE ENGLISH REVOLUTION-Christopher Hill’s View
BOOK REVIEW
THE EXPERIENCE OF
DEFEAT-MILTON AND SOME CONTEMPORIES, CHRISTOPHER HILL, PENGUIN BOOKS, NEW YORK,
1984
As I have noted in previous
reviews of the work of Professor Hill although both the parliamentary and
royalist sides in the English Revolution, the major revolutionary event of the
17th century, quoted the Bible, particularly the newer English versions, for
every purpose from an account of the Fall to the virtues of primitive communism
that revolution cannot be properly understood except as a secular revolution.
The first truly secular revolution of modern times. The late pre-eminent
historian of the under classes of the English Revolution has taken the myriad
ideas, serious and zany, that surfaced during the period between 1640-60, the
heart of the revolutionary period and analyzed their contemporary importance.
Moreover, he has given us, as far as the surviving records permit, what
happened to those ideas, the people who put them forth and their various
reactions to the defeat of their ideas in the late revolutionary period and at
the Restoration. And through it all hovers Hill’s ever present muse for the
period, John Milton- the poet who tried to explain in verse the ways of God to humankind
at the failure of the ‘revolution of the saints’.
As been noted by more than
one historian there is sometimes a disconnect between the ideas in the air at
any particular time and the way those ideas get fought out in political
struggle. In this case secular ideas, or what would have passed for such to us,
like the questions of the divinity of the monarch, of social, political and
economic redistribution and the nature of the new society (the second coming)
were expressed in familiar religious terms.
That being the case there is no better guide to understanding the
significance of the mass of biblically-driven literary articles and some
secular documents produced in the period than Professor Hill. Here we meet up
again, as we have in Hill's other numerous volumes of work, with the democratic
oppositionists the Levelers; the Diggers, especially the thoughts of their
leader Gerrard Winstanley, in many aspects the forerunner of a modern branch of
communist thought; the Ranters, Seekers and Quakers who among them challenged
every possible orthodox Christian theory and the usual cast of individual
political and religious radicals like Samuel Fisher and, my personal favorite,
Abiezer Coppe.
As I have noted elsewhere a
key to understanding that plebian entry onto history's stage and underscores
the widespread discussion of many of these trends is Cromwell's New Model Army
where the plebian base and the frustrated professional middle class, for a time
anyway, had serious input into the direction that society might take. Some have
criticize Hill on the question of how important this was in the overall scheme
of things but the last word on the impact of those ideas and their influence
has not been spoken. In any case, as these radicals were moved to the margins
of political society they has various reactions familiar as well in later
revolutions- passivity, silence, a personally opportunistic acceptance of the new order and
in too few cases a fight to save the revolutionary gains. In many ways
Professor Hill's book is a study of what happened when the, for lack of a
better term, Thermodorian reaction- the ebb of the revolution set in and a
portion of those 'masterless' men had to deal with the consequences of defeat
for the plebian masses during the Protectorate and Restoration. The heroic
attempts to save the revolution in danger by the Fifth Monarchy uprisings,
composed of former soldiers, and the return of Quakers to the Army in 1659 only
underscore that point. Those of us on today’s embattled plebian left now know we
had some honorable predecessors.
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