Anne Ley
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Anne (Norman) Ley (c. 1599 – 1641) was an English writer, teacher, and polemicist.[1] She wrote several poems, letters, meditations, and funerary texts.[1][2] Her husband was Roger Ley, a writer and a curate of St. Leonard's Church in Shoreditch, Middlesex.[3][4] Both of the couple were ardent royalists and religious conformists.[4]
Her commonplace book and works survive to this day, compiled into a manuscript by her husband after her death in 1641.[5]
Anne Ley was born to Thomas Norman of Bedfordshire, a leatherseller, and his wife Anne (née Searle).[2][3][5][6] Anne Ley was baptized on 19 August 1599 as "Annie" Norman.[5] Thomas Norman was a graduate of St. Albany Hall, Oxford.[2] He apparently belonged to the lower class, as he was enrolled as a "'pleb,'" as opposed to a "'gent.'"[2]
At fifteen, Anne Ley was engaged to Roger Ley.[5] They didn't marry until seven years later.[5] According to Donald W. Foster in Women's Works, the reason for this prolonged engagement was "relative poverty: ‘their portions were only virtue, [which] would buy neither food nor raiment.’"[5] In fact, the Leys ended up spending their whole lives in poverty.[4]
The couple finally married on 25 February 1621 or 1622, at St. Bodolph's Church, Bishopgate.[3][5][7]
Life after Marriage
Sometime after their marriage, the Leys established a parish school on Shoreditch to help with their finance.[4][7] Anne Ley is said to have "by unparraleld industrie, taught herself Latin and Greek in order to teach" to "university standard" at the parish school.[1][2]
The couple was close to the Shoreditch parish minister John Squire, who also used to be Roger Ley's classmate and friend.[5] According to Jane Stevenson and Peter Davidson in Early Modern Women Poets (1520-1700): An Anthology, Squire was also "one of the most controversial figures in Church" at the time, "accused of asserting that papists were kings’ best subjects, of writing himself ‘priest’ and despising the appellations ‘ministor’ and ‘pastor,’ and of upholding priestly excommunication."[2] Squire is said to have decorated his church with "’[p]ictures of the Virgin Mary, of Christ, and his 12 Apostles at his last supper in Glasse.’"[2] The parishioners petitioned against him at some point, stating that "’hee hath peremptorily said, that none shall come hear to Preach, but himselfe or his Curate, so long as hee hath anything to doe in the place.’"[2] Roger Ley likely would have also been "of the Laudian (or High Church) persuasion, and ... [Anne Ley], too, [would have] supported the direction in which Archbishop Laud and the King were taking the church."[2]
Many of Anne Ley's later letters are written from Roger Ley's country house in Northchurch, Hertfordshire.[5][7] And she seems to have stayed there until her death eleven years later, while Roger Ley stayed in London.[5] Foster says that it's likely that she did so to "escape the plague which broke out in 1636, when she wrote a will, or the earlier plague of 1625."[5][7] But it was "clearly a reluctant exile, as she repeatedly expresses a desire to return to her beloved London."[5][7] In a letter to her father, she "complains of enforced exile" and portrays herself as "a banished Ulysses."[5] Foster comments that "Anna Ley, Hester Pulter, and Anne Bradstreet are among the married writers who explain of their isolation, having no adult companionship while their husbands are gone."[5]
Anne Ley became sick with a "lengthy but unspecified illness" sometime before her death in 1641.[7][8] When she died during the first week of October, 1641, she was buried next to her parents at her husband's Shoreditch parish.[7] The burial took place on 21 or 22 October 1641.[2][5][7]
Roger Ley
Roger Ley was born in 1593 or 1594 at Crewe, Cheshire.[3][5] Neither of his parents is identified.[3] In 1606, Roger Ley enrolled at Jesus College, Cambridge.[3][5] He graduated with a B.A. in 1610 and an M.A. in 1613.[3] On 11 April 1614, he was ordained as a deacon in Peterborough.[3] On 31 May 1618, he was ordained as a priest in London.[3] Shortly afterwards, he was appointed as the curate to St. Leonard’ s Church in Shoreditch.[3][5]
He published two of his sermons on Paul's Cross: ‘The Sceptor of Righteousness’ (20 December 1618) and ‘The Bruising of the Serpent's Head’ (9 September 1621).[3][5][7] According to Roger Ley's Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry by Keith Lindley, these works "reveal a firm belief in the Calvinist doctrine of election to salvation, an early opposition to Arminianism, a preoccupation with the threat posed by the Antichrist, and an awareness of the danger of religion's being polluted by superstition and idolatry."[3] Roger Ley also wrote Gesta Britannica, a history of the British Church told in Latin.[3][5] Gesta Britannica consisted of ten volumes, which, according to Foster, "extended from the first Celtic converts of ancient Britain through the death of Charles I."[5] Roger Ley finished the first draft on 28 April 1664, when he was 70-years old.[5] Most importantly, Gesta Britannica includes "in pass[ing] various details and anecdotes from the author's own person experience": for instance, he records his survival of "the London plague of 1625 ... the tribulation of the Civil War, and the repression of Cromwell's government."[5] Although he was a Calvinist, Roger Ley strongly criticized how the "churches were desecrated, and the clergy mistreated, by Puritans before and during the Interregnum."[5]
In The Arts of Remembrance in Early Modern England: Memorial Cultures of the Post Reformation, Andrew Gordon and Thomas Rist comment on Roger Ley's works as following:
Civil war ecclesiastical politics dominated these texts. ‘A New Samosatenian’ records his disputation with the anti-Trinitarian Paul Best, his former chamber-fellow at Jesus College, Cambridge. His cycle of nine elegies, ‘Albion in blacke,’ was written in response to the civil wars, its concluding poem vindicating the Restoration.[1]
According to Lindley, Roger Ley is also famous for his "outright denunciation of Paul Best for anti-trinitarian views."[3]
Roger Ley served as the rector of Brean, Somerset from 1663 until his death in 1668.[3] According to Lindley, Roger Ley wrote his will on 30 October 1667, leaving "an interest in a tenement" at Limehouse, Middlesex, "a seven-year lease on a house in Phoenix Alley ... Westminster," "a small library of books," and the "contents of the house ... at Wells."[3] He named his nephew, Timothy Ley, and Isaac Saunderson, a vicar of Plumstead, Kent as his executors.[3] It can be inferred from this information (and from the fact that Anne Ley's will doesn't mention any children either) that the Leys had no surviving child, if they had any.[3][5] His burial was most likely in Brean.[3]