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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter April 10, 2018

“Never Better”: Affliction, Consolation and the Culture of Protestantism in Early Modern England

  • Jan Frans van Dijkhuizen EMAIL logo

Abstract

This essay examines the central role of consolation in early modern Protestant culture. It first maps a number of the important tropes in early modern Protestant consolation literature, focusing on England. It then analyses the language of consolation in early modern printed and manuscript sources on the legal proceedings against the Puritan pamphleteers Bastwick, Burton and Prynne, showing how consolation was both widely shared and politically contentious, undermining the very idea of a unified Protestant cause which it served to foster. Finally, I examine the notebooks of the London wood-turner Nehemiah Wallington as a case study of the ways in which self-writers, in recording and reflecting on affliction, drew on consolation discourses. While consolation is a central strand in Wallington’s reflections on affliction, it is also elusive and provisional, especially where everyday, personal suffering is concerned. In Wallington, consolation seems available especially if the religious suffering it alleviates has a political dimension, and can be construed as a way of suffering for the true faith.

Published Online: 2018-4-10
Published in Print: 2018-4-25

© 2018 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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