What was Shakespeare’s religion?

 
 
Gillian Woods
January 23, 2016
 
 
What was Shakespeare’s religion? It’s possible to answer this seemingly  
simple question in lots of different ways. Like other English subjects who 
lived  through the ongoing Reformation, Shakespeare was legally obliged to 
attend  Church of England services. Officially, at least, he was a Protestant. 
But a  number of scholars have argued that there is evidence that 
Shakespeare had  connections through his family and school teachers with Roman 
Catholicism, a  religion which, through the banning of its priests, had 
effectively 
become  illegal in England. Even so, ancestral and even contemporary links 
with the  faith that had been the country’s official religion as recently as 
1558, would  make Shakespeare typical of his time. And in any case, to 
search for a defining  religious label is to miss some of what is most 
interesting about religion in  early modern England, and more importantly, what 
is 
most interesting about  Shakespeare. 
Questions such as ‘was Shakespeare a Protestant or a Catholic?’ use terms  
that are too neat for the reality of post-Reformation England. The simple 
labels  Catholic, Protestant, and Puritan paper over a complex lived 
experience. Even in  less turbulent times, religion is a framework for belief; 
actual faith slips in  and out of official doctrine. Religion establishes a set 
of principles about  belief and practice, but individuals pick and choose 
which bits they listen  to. 
‘Catholicism’ was an especially tricky category in this era. Under 
pressure  of crippling fines and even execution, early modern Catholics 
maintained 
their  faith in a variety of ways. Not every so-called papist supported the 
pope. The  Roman Catholic Church of this era encompassed ‘recusants’ (who 
openly displayed  their Catholicism by refusing to attend mandatory Church of 
England services)  and ‘church papists’ (who conformed to the monarch’s 
protestant customs, but  secretly practiced Catholicism).  
(http://blog.oup.com/2016/01/what-was-shakespeares-religion/#_ftn1) Some 
Catholics supported 
Elizabeth politically, looking to the  pope only in spiritual matters; others 
plotted her overthrow. Catholicism was in  the eye of the beholder; hotter 
Protestants saw many elements of Elizabeth’s own  Church as horrifyingly ‘
Romish’, but to average Protestants those puritanical  objections seemed 
hysterical. Some accepted the theology and politics of the  reformation, but 
still harboured an emotional attachment to older traditions,  like praying for 
the dead. Furthermore, people have a habit of changing their  minds over 
time, shifting their beliefs at different moments of their lives.  Asking about 
the confessional allegiance of any early modern individual is a  much more 
difficult – and interesting – enterprise than figuring out an  either/or 
choice. Whatever Shakespeare’s personal faith was, he wrote plays that  worked 
for audiences who had to feel their way through these dilemmas, audiences  
for whom Protestantism was the official state religion, but who experienced a 
 far messier reality. 
Playhouses provided spaces to explore these anxieties. Even though the 
direct  representation of specific theological controversy was banned, 
Renaissance plays  frequently featured elements of the Roman Catholic religion 
that 
had been  practically outlawed in real life. Purgatorial ghosts and 
well-meaning friars  still appeared on stage; star-crossed lovers framed their 
first 
kiss in terms of  saintly intercession and statue veneration (Romeo and 
Juliet,  1.4.206-19); and various characters swore ‘by the mass’, ‘by the rood’
, and  ‘by’r lady’. Shakespeare wrote over sixty years after Henry VIII 
set the  Reformation in motion. By the 1590s, English friars, nuns and hermits 
belonged  firmly to the past, and many writers used them like the formula ‘
once upon a  time’: to create a safely distant, fictional world. Even so, 
Catholic Europe and  Jesuit missionaries were perceived by state authorities 
as a very present  danger. Anti-Catholic propaganda demonised that faith as 
fundamentally  deceitful; ‘papist’ piety was mere pretence, a cover for 
lechery, treachery, and  sin. Accordingly, some writers used Catholic settings 
as a shorthand for  corruption (think of the decadent world of Webster’s 
Duchess of Malfi,  with its murderous and lascivious Cardinal). 
(http://blog.oup.com/2016/01/what-was-shakespeares-religion/#_ftn2)  So 
Catholicism could 
point in different fictional directions:  it could benignly and nostalgically 
suggest an unreal past, in the manner of a  fairytale; or, it could paint a 
threatening image of a more contemporary fraud.  But it’s striking that 
Shakespeare uses Catholic content rather differently from  his contemporary 
dramatists, often embracing the contradictory connotations of,  say, a friar, 
exploiting the figure’s nostalgic and threatening associations at  the same 
time. This exploration of ambiguity seems to have been one way in which  he 
thought through not only religious controversies, but also the very act of  
making fiction itself. A figure who works both like a fairytale and like a 
fraud  tests out what is good and what is dangerous about literary illusion. 
All’s Well that Ends Well is a case in point. This comedy tests  fantasy 
ideals against real-life problems. Helen, the clever wench who  miraculously 
cures a king and wins a husband of her own choosing, finds herself  in love 
with a prince who isn’t so charming. But critics have never been too  sure 
about whether Helen herself is a virtuous victim of her snobbish husband,  or 
if she’s simply conniving and self-centred. By putting all of these  
possibilities in play Shakespeare invites us to interrogate the ideals that  
underpin romantic comedy: are the conventions we think of as happy endings  
really 
all that happy?
 
 
One way that Helen secures her own happy ending is by putting on a pilgrim’
s  habit which allows her to follow (and eventually catch) her runaway 
husband. But  this costume, with its mixed Catholic associations, further 
complicates the  character and the morality of the plot. While the Catholic 
Church 
regarded  pilgrimage to holy places as “meritorious” (a way of piously worki
ng to the  salvation that only Christ could enable), Reformers scoffed at 
the notion that  one earthly place could be holier than another, dismissed as 
idolatrous the  intercession of saints usually invoked at shrines, and 
abhorred the idea that  Christ’s gift of salvation needed supplementing. 
Shakespeare hints both that  Helen might be the hypocrite of anti-Catholic 
polemic, 
who uses a pious habit to  conceal selfish intentions, and that she might 
be a prayerful woman, who would  be justly rewarded with a happy ending. 
Furthermore, the comedy also draws on  more secular associations of ‘pilgrimage’
, which run through the love poetry of  the period figuring amorous 
devotion. We first learn of Helen’s pilgrimage in a  letter that takes the form 
of 
the sonnet; at this point Helen is painted as  something of a Petrarchan 
stalker, trekking her errant husband in the clothing  of well-worn poetic 
metaphor. But Shakespeare unpicks other threads of meaning  in the pilgrim 
costume too. In anti-Catholic fabliaux pilgrims used their  religious journeys 
for 
decidedly smutty adventures. It’s probably no mistake  that Helen uses her 
pilgrimage so that she can finally have sex. And again,  there’s a question 
mark hanging over this behaviour. On the one hand her active  desire for 
physical intimacy with her husband is legitimate and liberating, but  on the 
other, she repeatedly removes her husband’s power of consent, most  
disturbingly in a bed-trick (a ‘wicked meaning in a lawful deed’). The comedy  
questions her sexual scruples. 
Shakespeare exploits the various associations of the pilgrim in  
post-Reformation England. In Helen, papist and Catholic connotations are  
compounded: 
she is meritorious and devious, miraculous and cunning. The ‘happy  ending’ 
of this play sees husband and wife reunited and apparently reconciled.  But 
the ‘real’ wonder of this moment is provisional: ‘All yet seems  well’ 
(my emphasis). The audience is very aware of the pragmatic tricks that  Helen 
had to perform in order win this resolution. By drawing on the  
contradictory meanings of the pilgrim, Shakespeare creates a paradoxical  
character that 
engages his audience with the ethical dilemmas of fiction: when  might the 
means justify the ends? 
In this play, as in others, Shakespeare calls on the ambiguous associations 
 of Catholic figures, images and ideas, as a means of engaging his audience 
with  the problems he frames. He seems to revel in the pleasures of 
slippery meaning.  By flirting with stereotypes and sectarian expectations he 
makes 
his audience  think more deeply about the difficulties of the plays and 
their own culture.  Whatever Shakespeare’s personal religion was, the religion 
he put on stage was  both playful and probing. 
 
 
 
Gillian Woods is a Lecturer in Renaissance Theatre and Drama  at Birkbeck 
College, University of London. She has published on a range of early  modern 
drama, including works by Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe, John Ford and  
Anthony Munday. Her latest book is _Shakespeare's Unreformed Fictions_ 
(https://global.oup.com/academic/product/shakespeares-unreformed-fictions-978019967
1267)   (2013).


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