Here is a meditation around the role of Thomas Fairfax as a model
of authority in a moment when England was searching for order. It is written
following a talk at a recent meeting of my Local History Society.
There are moments in history when the fate of a nation seems to hinge not on constitutions or armies but on the character of a few individuals who, without seeking it, become the custodians of order. Thomas Fairfax belongs to that small company. He was a general of rare ability, yet his life after the Civil War suggests something deeper than military competence. It suggests a man who believed—instinctively, quietly, without philosophical flourish—that authority must rest on virtue if it is to endure.
This is not the language of seventeenth‑century England. It
is, however, the language of Confucius, who taught that harmony begins with
right relationships: ruler and subject, parent and child, word and meaning. A
society is not held together by force or cleverness but by the moral coherence
of those who lead it. When that coherence fails, disorder follows, no matter
how elaborate the machinery of the state.
Fairfax lived through precisely such a failure.
I. The Aftermath of Regicide: Power Without Moral Centre
The execution of Charles I in 1649 was, for many
Parliamentarians, the necessary climax of a long struggle. For Fairfax, it was
something else: a rupture in the moral fabric of the kingdom. He had fought the
King’s armies, but he had not fought for the King’s death. When summoned to sit
as a judge, he refused. Lady Anne’s cry from the gallery—“He is not here, and
he will never be here”—was the public expression of a private conviction: that
authority cannot be built on an act that violates the deeper order of things.
Confucius would have recognised the moment. When the ruler
loses virtue, the state becomes a theatre of confusion. Ritual becomes empty
form; words lose their meaning; power becomes self‑justifying. The
Commonwealth, for all its talk of liberty, soon displayed these symptoms.
Parliament dissolved and reassembled in bewildering combinations. Financial
abstractions multiplied. Ideological noise drowned out the quieter claims of
justice and moderation.
Fairfax watched this with a kind of sorrow. He had fought to
restrain arbitrary power, not to replace it with a republic of abstractions.
The regicides had removed the monarch but failed to cultivate the moral order
that might have replaced him. They had, in Confucian terms, lost the Mandate of
Heaven—not because they lacked legal right, but because they lacked moral
right.
II. Fairfax and Cromwell: Two Models of Authority
The contrast with Oliver Cromwell is instructive. Cromwell
was a man of immense gifts—decisive, visionary, unafraid of power. But his
authority, for all its religious fervour, rested ultimately on force: the Army,
the Protectorate, the machinery of the state. He governed through a kind of
English Legalism, believing that order could be imposed if only the right
structures were in place and the right men held the reins.
Fairfax’s authority was of a different kind. He governed by
example, not decree. He listened more than he commanded. He refused to act when
conscience forbade it. He stepped aside when power demanded what virtue could
not supply. Cromwell believed in the transformative power of institutions;
Fairfax believed in the transformative power of character.
The final break came in 1650, when Cromwell urged a pre‑emptive
strike against the Scots. Fairfax could not bring himself to wage war on a
nation that had once been an ally in the struggle for liberty. Rather than lead
a campaign he believed unjust, he resigned his commission. It was a gesture
Confucius would have recognised: the withdrawal of the junzi—the exemplary
man—when the ruler no longer heeds the Way.
III. The Collapse of the Protectorate: A Nation Without a
Centre
When Cromwell died in 1658, the Protectorate began to
crumble almost at once. Richard Cromwell lacked his father’s authority; the
Army fractured; Parliament bickered. England drifted, weary of experiment and
hungry for stability. It was a moment when the nation seemed to have lost not
only its institutions but its moral grammar.
Into this vacuum stepped General George Monck, the military
governor of Scotland. Monck was no ideologue. He understood power, but he also
understood its limits. His instinct was for order, not upheaval. He marched
south not as a conqueror but as a man attempting to restore coherence to a
country that had forgotten how to govern itself.
Fairfax, watching from Yorkshire, recognised the moment. A
rising in the north threatened to ignite wider disorder. He mounted his horse
once more. The sight of him—this modest, battle‑worn figure—was enough to
steady the county. Men followed him not because he commanded them, but because
they trusted him.
This is the Confucian ideal of authority: not the authority
of force, but the authority of character.
IV. The Restoration as a Work of Moral Repair
Monck, recognising Fairfax’s influence, consulted him
closely. Fairfax did not dictate terms; he did not seek office. Instead, he
lent his name—still one of the most trusted in England—to the one solution that
could end the cycle of coups, dissolutions, and military interventions: the
Restoration of Charles II under conditions that would protect the liberties for
which the Civil War had been fought.
Fairfax’s support reassured former Parliamentarians that the
Restoration need not mean revenge, and reassured Royalists that reconciliation
was possible. It was a gesture of national healing from a man who had once
commanded the army that defeated the monarchy.
V. Virtue as the Ground of Authority
How far, then, can we say that Fairfax embodied the
Confucian idea of authority grounded in virtue rather than power?
- He
subordinated ambition to conscience.
- He
refused to participate in acts he believed morally corrosive.
- He
exercised power lightly and relinquished it easily.
- He
believed that right relationships—between ruler and subject, army and
Parliament, victory and mercy—were the true foundations of harmony.
- He
acted not to dominate events but to steady them.
In a century of ideological noise, Fairfax’s life reads
almost like a counterpoint: a reminder that the stability of a nation depends
less on the brilliance of its institutions than on the character of the people
who inhabit them. He was, in that sense, a kind of English junzi—an exemplary
man whose authority flowed not from office or force but from the quiet
coherence of his own conduct.
His memorial says it plainly:
“He might have been a King but that he understood
How much it is a meaner thing to be unjustly great
Than honourably good.”
In the end, Fairfax matters because he shows us that virtue,
even when it refuses the stage, can still shape the fate of a nation.





