John Foxe has begun to write a…
1559 CE
John Foxe has begun to write a history of the persecutions of Christians; so poor that he is unable to travel with his family until money is sent to him, he departs Basel for England in 1559.
He had moved to Basel to work with his fellow countrymen John Bale and Lawrence Humphrey at the drudgery of proofreading. (Educated Englishmen are noted for their learning, industry, and honesty and "would also be the last persons to quarrel with their bread and butter." No knowledge of German or French is required because the English tend to socialize with each other and can communicate with scholars in Latin.)
Foxe also has completed and had printed a religious drama, Christus Triumphans (1556), in Latin verse.
Yet, despite receiving occasional financial contributions from English merchants on the continent, Foxe seems to have lived very close to the margin and been "wretchedly poor."
When Foxe had received reports from England about the ongoing religious persecution there, he had written a pamphlet urging the English nobility to use their influence with the queen to halt it.
Fearing that the appeal would be useless, his fears had proved correct.
When his friend Knox attacked Mary Stewart in his now famous The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women, Foxe had apparently criticized Knox's "rude vehemency," although their friendship seems to have remained unimpaired.
Following the death of Mary I in 1558, Foxe, in no hurry to return home, has waited to see if religious changes instituted by her successor, Elizabeth I, take root.