糖心Vlog

Music at Midnight: The Life and Poetry of George Herbert, by John Drury

Hugh Adlington gains a greater appreciation of one of England鈥檚 greatest devotional poets

Published on
August 29, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

George Herbert, perhaps the greatest devotional poet in the English language, is little known to readers today, and thus John Drury鈥檚 perceptive and wonderfully accessible account is particularly welcome. Born into the lesser nobility, Herbert was the star pupil of the churchman and linguist Lancelot Andrewes, a聽friend of John Donne and an outstanding scholar at Trinity College, Cambridge, although he聽was frequently made ill by too much study.

A religious impulse was evident from the start. Upon arriving at Cambridge, Herbert wrote to his mother, declaring 鈥渢hat my poor abilities in poetry shall be all and ever consecrated to God鈥檚 glory鈥; other letters mention plans to become a beneficed clergyman. Yet Herbert was not immune to worldly ambition. He sat as MP for Montgomery in the 1624 Parliament, and campaigned for, won and held on to the prestigious post of University Orator for eight years in the 1620s. Both of his predecessors in this role had gone on to high state office. When a property deal brought financial independence, however, he resigned the oratorship and two years later was ordained as priest and instituted as rector of the rural parish of Bemerton in Wiltshire.

Drury鈥檚 book is especially valuable in its deft and insightful expositions of Herbert鈥檚 formal and stylistic brilliance

Early biographers romanticised his change of direction. For such a聽man to become a country parson was to 鈥渓ose himself in a humble way鈥, and Herbert鈥檚 motto, 鈥淟ess than the least of God鈥檚 mercies鈥, was taken as an epitome of self-punishing humility. But this may well be to overstate the case. His sense of spiritual vocation had been there from the beginning, and it is clear that Charles I鈥檚 presentation of Herbert to the vacant living at Bemerton was made at the request of his relations, the earls of Pembroke, whose ancestral seat, Wilton House, sits within the parish boundaries. Herbert died of consumption just three years later, aged 39, his early death encouraging biographers to present him as saintly and high-minded. Yet it is not impossible to think that had he lived, Herbert might have risen in the Church to occupy a deanery like Donne or a聽bishop鈥檚 palace like Andrewes, with Bemerton just the first rung on the ecclesiastical ladder.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Herbert鈥檚 life, however, would be of only passing interest to us now had he not written The Temple (1633), his astoundingly inventive collection of religious poems, crafted in private and published only after his death. Aldous Huxley called Herbert the 鈥減oet of inner weather鈥, amply demonstrated by any of the poems in The Temple. The most famous of these include The Collar, beginning with the dramatic outburst, 鈥淚 struck the board, and cried, No聽more鈥; Love (III), a confessional allegory, 鈥淟ove bade me welcome: yet my soul drew back鈥; and Prayer (I), dazzling the eye and beguiling the ear with its astonishing sequence of epithets, 鈥淭he soul in paraphrase鈥ngine against th鈥橝lmighty鈥eversed thunder鈥eaven in ordinary鈥︹. Attempting to evoke the reciprocity felt between God and man in prayer, one of the strangest and most original sonnets in English builds to its paradisal yet homely conclusion: 鈥淐hurch-bells beyond the stars heard, the soul鈥檚 blood,/The land of spices; something understood.鈥

From Andrewes, Herbert learned how to squeeze a world of meaning from a word; and with Donne, he shares arresting first and last lines, a keen ear for natural speech, and a delight in narrative compression. Herbert鈥檚 鈥渆asy style drawn from a native vein鈥, however, is his own. His dying wish was that his book of poems might be made public, 鈥渋f it may turn to the advantage of any dejected poor soul鈥. Six editions in seven years indicate just how advantageous The Temple鈥檚 first readers found it, and a large part of its appeal lies in its personal, confessional quality, what Herbert called 鈥渢he picture of the many spiritual conflicts that have passed betwixt God and my soul鈥. All the more reason, then, that Drury should explore the connection, as he does so illuminatingly, between what Robert Browning called the poet鈥檚 House and Shop, the life and work.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Bringing the life and the poetry together delivers numerous benefits. An allegorical poem such as The Family, ostensibly about internal tumult, takes on fresh life when also read as an affectionate picture of Herbert鈥檚 temperamental family in their crowded house in Charing Cross. Prose works by Herbert鈥檚 elder brother, the poet and philosopher Edward Herbert, read in conjunction with poems such as 贰尘辫濒辞测尘别苍迟听(滨滨) and Providence, enrich our understanding of the younger Herbert鈥檚 philosophy of nature. Knowing more about his contact with Andrewes and Donne casts light on the influence of the former on Herbert鈥檚 The Sacrifice, and of the latter on Sin鈥檚 Round and The Wreath. Music, gardening, church politics and theology all help us to read the poems with greater pleasure and understanding, and music in particular 鈥 its 鈥渕easure, tune and time鈥 鈥 is the interpretative key that unlocks so many poetic doors in The Temple. The forms and conventions of Latin poetry and disputation leave their mark on poems such as Virtue and 罢丑别听顿颈补濒辞驳耻别; and English poetic tradition, especially Sir Philip Sidney鈥檚 innovative sonnet sequence Astrophil and Stella, and the psalm translations undertaken by Sidney and his sister Mary, is also a crucial influence on Herbert鈥檚 design of both individual poems and of the entire sequence of The Temple.

Drury 鈥撀燼 biblical scholar, former dean of King鈥檚 College, Cambridge and editor of a forthcoming Penguin edition of Herbert鈥檚 Complete Poems 鈥撀爉anages wonderfully in bringing text and context profitably together. His book is especially valuable, and enjoyable, in its deft and insightful expositions of Herbert鈥檚 formal and stylistic brilliance; how the manner of Herbert鈥檚 poems 鈥 their verse forms, metre, syntax, diction and verbal patterning 鈥 enhance and intensify the matter: the complaints and praises, yearning and disappointments, griefs and joys. My only wish is that the book had taken some account of Adele Davidson鈥檚 recent contention that verbal game-playing in The Temple, the acrostics, anagrams, pattern poems and so聽on, goes much further than previously thought. Veiled meanings, hidden in plain sight, and the inexhaustible richness of the word are ideas that seem central to The Temple, yet such devices met with critical nose-holding, from John Dryden to Ernest de S茅lincourt, who said 鈥淪uch extravagances are little to our taste鈥. I聽would have been fascinated to hear what Drury had to say about it.

Herbert, of course, adapted his mode of expression to suit his present purpose, and the man himself is the sum of all of those modes. Thus he is equally present in The Temple鈥檚 intense focus on the soul鈥檚 tortured relationship with Christ: 鈥淭hou art/All my delight, so all my smart鈥; and in the model of sturdy common sense found in his amiably practical prose works, The Country Parson and Outlandish Proverbs: 鈥淟ove your neighbour, yet pull not downe your hedge鈥 and 鈥淢usick helps not the tooth-ach鈥. Ultimately, for this reader at least, it is Herbert鈥檚 poetry in The Temple rather than his life as scholar, orator and priest that generates the most engrossing questions, ironies and paradoxes. We should be grateful to Drury, then, for being such a sensitive and insightful guide, sending us back to Herbert鈥檚 poetry with renewed fascination and appreciation, to the 鈥淲ords of the right sort to ask about the divine鈥.

The author

The Very Reverend John Drury, who was ordained in 1963, is chaplain and fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. The biblical scholar and author lives 鈥渋n Oxford and North London with my wife Caroline Elam, an art historian and once editor of The Burlington Magazine, who did wonders with my drafts鈥. Oxford鈥檚 attractions, he believes, are balanced by its vexations in the form of 鈥渓arge groups of tourists鈥.

Born in Clacton-on-Sea, he later lived in Norwich 鈥渦nder German bombardment鈥. He recalls being schooled 鈥渆ventually very happily at Bradfield College鈥 in Berkshire before attending university. 鈥淚 was a studious child,鈥 Drury observes. 鈥淎 master at my prep school helped me understand architectural styles. We learned poems by heart.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

He took his undergraduate degree at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and cites a family connection in his decision. 鈥淢y great uncle Sir Alan Drury, the pathologist who enabled blood transfusion during the war, was a fellow of Trinity Hall.鈥

Drury took up his present post at All Souls in 2003, following 12 years as dean of Christ Church, Oxford and, prior to that, 10 years (1981 to 1991) as dean of chapel and fellow of King鈥檚 College, Cambridge. Asked if there is a building in Oxford to match the beauty of King鈥檚 College Chapel in Cambridge, he unhesitatingly recommends All Souls College Chapel.

Views on the differences between the two ancient universities abound; some contrarians even like to argue that there is none. 鈥淭here is a difference,鈥 confirms Drury, whose observations of the two establishments span a half-century. 鈥淚n Oxford the colleges take part in the appointment of faculty and can challenge professors. Not so in Cambridge. Oxford encourages the generalist, which suits me better. But King鈥檚 College, Cambridge was, as John Betjeman noticed, pretty much like Oxford.鈥 Asked if any of his views have changed since he first studied at Trinity Hall, he says, 鈥淪ince I was an undergraduate my sense of the power of imagination in history has grown.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

His academic career has not been confined exclusively to Oxbridge. In 1979 to 1981, he was a lecturer in religious studies at the University of Sussex, then still a young university not known for being a hotbed of conventional piety. Drury, however, did not find it uncongenial. Indeed, he recalls, 鈥淚t was wonderful to teach students who were interested in religion but not at all committed to it. At Cambridge the power of orthodoxy over the New Testament Seminar was stifling. Also, the general courses at Sussex brought me up against Nietzsche, Feuerbach and George Eliot, causing me to refashion my religion.鈥

Asked if he, like George Herbert, has ever felt it difficult to square the demands of his faith with another calling, in Drury鈥檚 case the academy, he say he found 鈥渘o problems. At King鈥檚 I remember complaining to an anthropologist friend that I was too heretical to be a clergyman - and she told me that I was incredibly lucky to have something to DO as well as think about!鈥

Of Herbert鈥檚 many proverbs, Drury names as his favourite: 鈥淭o be beloved is above all bargains鈥.

Invited to reveal some of his hobbies or pastimes, he observes laconically, 鈥淚 used to draw well. Might start again now.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Karen Shook

Music at Midnight: The Life and Poetry of George Herbert

By John Drury
Allen Lane, 416pp, 拢25.00
ISBN 9781846142482
Published 5 September 2013

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT