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John Bale (baseball)''

John Bale
'John Bale' (
21 November,
1495–November,
1563) was an
English churchman, historian and controversialist, and
Bishop of Ossory.
He was born at
Cove, near
Dunwich in
Suffolk. At the age of twelve he entered the
Carmelite monastery at
Norwich, removing later to the house of "Holme", probably the abbey of the
Whitefriars at
Hulne near
Alnwick. Later he entered
Jesus College, Cambridge, and took his degree of BD in
1529. At
Cambridge he came under the influence of
Thomas Cranmer and of
Thomas Wentworth, 1st Baron Wentworth, and became an ardent Reformer. He was the last Prior of the Ipswich Carmelite house, elected in 1533.
[1] He abandoned his monastic vocation, and got married, saying, "that I might never more serve so execrable a beast, I took to wife the faithful Dorothy." He obtained the living of
Thorndon,
Suffolk, but in
1534 was summoned before the
Archbishop of York for a sermon against the invocation of saints preached at
Doncaster, and afterwards before Stokesley, Bishop of London, but he escaped through the powerful protection of
Thomas Cromwell, whose notice he is said to have attracted by his
miracle plays.
In these plays, Bale allows no considerations of decency to stand in the way of his denunciations of the monastic system and its supporters. The prayer of Infidelitas which opens the second act of his ''Three Laws'' is an example of the lengths to which he went in profane parody. These coarse and violent productions were calculated to impress popular feeling, and Cromwell found in him an invaluable instrument. When Cromwell fell from favour in
1540, Bale fled with his wife and children to
Flanders. He returned on the accession of King
Edward VI, and received the living of
Bishopstoke,
Hampshire, being promoted in
1552 to the
Irish see of
Ossory. He refused to be consecrated by the
Roman Catholic rites of the Irish church, and won his point, though the dean of
Dublin made a protest against the revised office during the ceremony. When the accession of
Queen Mary inaugurated a reaction in matters of religion, he was forced to get out of the country again. He tried to escape to
Scotland, but on the voyage was captured by a
Dutch man-of-war, which was driven by bad weather into
St Ives, Cornwall. Bale was arrested on suspicion of
treason, but soon released. At
Dover he had another narrow escape, but he eventually made his way to the Netherlands and thence to
Frankfurt and
Basel. During his exile he devoted himself to writing. After his return, on the accession of
Queen Elizabeth I, he received (
1560) a
prebendal stall at
Canterbury, where he died and was buried in the cathedral.
The scurrility and vehemence with which "foul-mouthed Bale", as
Anthony Wood calls him, attacked his enemies does not destroy the value of his contributions to literature, though his strong bias against Roman Catholic writers detracts from the critical value of his works. Of his mysteries and miracle plays only five have been preserved, but the titles of the others, quoted by himself in his ''Catalogus'', show that they were animated by the same political and religious aims. The ''Three Laws of Nature, Moses and Christ, corrupted by the Sodomytes, Pharisees and Papystes most wicked'' (pr.
1538 and again in
1562) was a
morality play. The direction for the dressing of the parts is instructive: "Let Idolatry be decked like an old witch, Sodomy like a monk of all sects, Ambition like a bishop, Covetousness like a Pharisee or spiritual lawyer, False Doctrine like a popish doctor, and Hypocrisy like a gray friar." ''A Tragedye; or enterlude many Jesting the chief promyses of God unto Man . . .'' (
1538, printed in Dodsley's Old Plays, vol. 1), ''The Temptacyon of our Lorde'' (ed.
AB Grosart in ''Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library'', vol. j., 1870), and ''A brefe Comedy or Enterlude of Johan Baptystes preachynge in the Wyldernesse, etc.''. (Harl. Misc. vol i.) were all written in
1538. His plays are doggerel, but he is a figure of some dramatic importance as the author of ''Kynge Johan'' (c.
1538), which marks the transition between the old morality play and the English historical drama. It does not appear to have directly influenced the creators of the chronicle histories. To the authors of the ''Troublesome Raigne of King John'' (
1591) it was apparently unknown, but it is noteworthy that an attempt, however feeble, at historical drama was made fourteen years before the production of ''Gorboduc''. ''Kynge Johan'' (ed. JP Collier, Camden Soc.
1838) is itself a polemic against the Roman Catholic Church.
King John is represented as the champion of English rites against the Roman see:—
:"This noble Kynge Johan, as a faythfull Moses
:Withstode proude Pharao for his poore Israel."
But the English people remained in the bondage of Rome,—
:"Tyll that duke Josue, whych was our late Kynge Henrye,
:Clerely brought us out in to the lande of mylke and honye."
Elsewhere John is called a
Lollard and accused of "heretycall langage," and he is finally poisoned by a monk of
Swinestead. Allegorical characters are mixed with the real persons. ''Ynglonde vidua'', represents the nation, and the jocular element is provided by Sedwyson (sedition), who would have been the Vice in a pure morality play. One actor was obviously intended to play many parts, for stage directions such as "Go out Ynglond, and dress for Clargy" are by no means uncommon. The MS. of ''Kynge Johan'' was discovered between
1831 and
1838 among the corporation papers at
Ipswich, where it was probably performed, for there are references to charitable foundations by
King John in the town and neighbourhood. It is described at the end of the MS. as two plays, but there is no obvious division, the end of the first act alone being noted. The first part is corrected by Bale and the latter half is in his handwriting, but his name nowhere occurs. In the list of his works, however, he gives a play ''De Joanne Anglorum Rege'', written in idiomate materno.
Bale's most important work is ''
Illustrium majoris Britanniae scriptorum, hoc est, Angliae, Cambriae, ac Scotiae Summarium...''(
Ipswich and
Wesel, for
John Overton,
1548,
1549). This contained five centuries, but another edition, almost entirely rewritten and containing fourteen centuries, was printed at Basel with the title ''Scriptorum illustnium majoris Britanniae...Catalogus'' (
1557–
1559). The chronological catalogue of British authors and their works was partly founded on the ''Collectanea and Commentarii'' of
John Leland, but Bale was an indefatigable collector and worker, and himself examined many of the valuable libraries of the Augustinian and Carmelite houses before their dissolution. In his notebook he records as an instance of the wholesale destruction in progress: "I have bene also at Norwyche, our second citye of name, and there all the library monuments are turned to the use of their grossers, candelmakers, sopesellers, and other worldly occupyers . . . As much have I saved there and in certen other places in Northfolke and Southfolke concerning the authors names and titles of their workes, as I could, and as much wold I have done through out the whole realm, yf I had been able to have borne the charges, as I am not." His work is therefore invaluable, in spite of the inaccuracies and the abuse lavished on Catholic writers, for it contains much information that would otherwise have been hopelessly lost.
A list of Bale's works is to be found in ''Athenae Cantabrigienses'' (vol. i. pp. 227 et seq.). Beside the reprints already mentioned, ''
The Examinations of Lord Cobham, William Thorpe and Anne Askewe, &c''. were edited by the Rev.
H. Christmas for the
Parker Society in
1849. Bale's autograph note-book is preserved in the
Selden Collection of the
Bodleian Library,
Oxford. It contains the materials he collected for his two published catalogues arranged alphabetically, with no attempt at ornament of any kind, and without the personalities which deface his completed work. He also gives in most cases the sources from which his information was derived. This book was prepared for publication with notes by
Reginald Lane Poole, with the help of Mary Bateson, as ''Index Britanniae Scriptorum quos . . . . collegit loannes Baleus'' (
Clarendon Press,
1902), forming part ix. of ''Anecdota Oxonwnsia''.
John Pits or Pitseus (
1560–
1616), an English Catholic exile, founded on Bale's work his ''
Relationum historicarum de rebus anglicis tomus primus'' (
Paris,
1619), better known by its running title of ''
De Illustribus Angliae scriptoribus''. This is really the fourth book of a more extensive work. He omits the Wycliffite and Protestant divines mentioned by Bale, and the most valuable section is the lives of the Catholic exiles resident in
Douai and other French towns. He does not scruple to assert (''Nota de Joanne Bale'') that Bale's Catalogus was a misrepresentation of
John Leland's matter, though there is every reason to believe that he was only acquainted with Leland's work at second-hand, through Bale.
Notes
Reference
B. Zimmerman, 1899, The White Friars at Ipswich, ''Proc Suffolk Institute of Archaeology'' 10 Part 2, 196-204.
See also
★
Dissolution of the Monasteries