men’s humours, to disturb religion and commonwealth,
and mingle divine and human things; which were a thing
in deed evil, in example worst of all; to our own
subjects hurtful, and to themselves—to whom
it is granted, neither greatly commodious, nor yet
at all safe.”—[Camden] The words
were addressed, it is true, to Papists, but there is
very little doubt that Anabaptists or any other heretics
would have received a similar reply, had they, too,
ventured to demand the right of public worship.
It may even be said that the Romanists in the earlier
days of Elizabeth’s reign fared better than
the Calvinists. The Queen neither banished nor
imprisoned the Catholics. She did not enter their
houses to disturb their private religious ceremonies,
or to inquire into their consciences. This was
milder treatment than the burning alive, burying alive,
hanging, and drowning, which had been dealt out to
the English and the Netherland heretics by Philip
and by Mary, but it was not the spirit which William
the Silent had been wont to manifest in his measures
towards Anabaptists and Papists alike. Moreover,
the Prince could hardly forget that of the nine thousand
four hundred Catholic ecclesiastics who held benefices
at the death of Queen Mary, all had renounced the Pope
on the accession of Queen Elizabeth, and acknowledged
her as the head of the church, saving only one hundred
and eighty-nine individuals. In the hearts of
the nine thousand two hundred and eleven others, it
might be thought perhaps that some tenderness for
the religion from which they had so suddenly been
converted, might linger, while it could hardly be hoped
that they would seek to inculcate in the minds of their
flocks or of their sovereign any connivance with the
doctrines of Geneva.
When, at a later period, the plotting of Catholics,
suborned by the Pope and Philip, against the throne
and person of the Queen, made more rigorous measures
necessary; when it was thought indispensable to execute
as traitors those Roman seedlings—seminary
priests and their disciples—who went about
preaching to the Queen’s subjects the duty of
carrying out the bull by which the Bishop of Rome had
deposed and excommunicated their sovereign, and that
“it was a meritorious act to kill such princes
as were excommunicate,” even then, the men who
preached and practised treason and murder experienced
no severer treatment than that which other “heretics”
had met with at the Queen’s hands. Jesuits
and Popish priests were, by Act of Parliament, ordered
to depart the realm within forty days. Those
who should afterwards return to the kingdom were to
be held guilty of high treason. Students in the
foreign seminaries were commanded to return within
six months and recant, or be held guilty of high treason.
Parents and guardians supplying money to such students
abroad were to incur the penalty of a preamunire—perpetual
exile, namely, with loss of all their goods.