Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2014
Is not distracted England strangely dead?
For who can say she lives that wants her head;
She, whom the hand of Kings could only guid[e]
Is growen a hobby horse for boyes to ride
And parlements are suddenly upon it
Like dust they swept from where she in worships sit
Sleep is so heavy on that stupid land
That if she beare affronts from every hand
When men would flee the follyes of our age
She like a chayned Ape comes on the stage …
Richard Bellings to Sir Richard Browne, ‘Sunday morning 9 September 1659’A hastily-scrawled poem lamenting the fate of ‘dead England’ and the toppling of the known social order may seem to the modern eye a strange means by which to reinforce common bonds of allegiance and rekindle a sense of defiance in the face of defeat. In the estimations of the poem's author, Richard Bellings – long-time secretary to the Catholic Confederation of Kilkenny, ardent Royalist, and devout Irish Catholic – the future seemed unequivocally grim. At the time of his writing to his friend and ally, the English Royalist and diplomat Sir Richard Browne, Bellings had been in exile in France for most of a decade, lending what little support he could muster to restoring Charles Stuart, son of the executed Charles I, to the throne of the ‘Three Kingdoms’ (England, Scotland, and Ireland) following the resolute defeat of the Royalist cause in the Civil Wars (or ‘Wars of the Three Kingdoms’) of 1639–51. Exile came at an immense personal cost for Bellings and his fellow Royalists, marked as it was by long periods of destitution, dislocation, and disillusionment.
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