Fulke
Greville's Caelica and the
Calvinist Self
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Greville scholars and critics have always liked Caelica, for it
offers a quasi-narrative from which teasing allusions to the writer's
personal life and plentiful demonstrations of contextual influences
seem available. First published as a sequence in 1633, with the poems
arranged, according to Geoffrey Bullough, in the order they were
composed, Caelica has become
the focus of biographical speculation and
of judgments about Greville's aesthetic and philosophical evolution.[1]
There is a major critical tendency to trace in Caelica a development
from youthful self-definitions as Petrarchan lover to a more mature and
austere Calvinistic inwardness, and the progressive rejection of the
rhetoric of courtly love in favor of a plain, unadorned style.[2]
What this linear narrative of ethico-spiritual progress does not allow
for is the possibility that the discourses of Petrarchanism and
Calvinism, while apparently irreconcilable, are engaged in a kind of
textual interplay. At various moments in the sequence, it is possible
to locate discursive intersections which contribute to the verbal and
intellectual density of Greville's poetry.[3]
Caelica is a Calvinistic narrative of the self that takes the
form
and rhetoric of an earlier and ideologically alien, Petrarchan,
discourse. At the time when Caelica
was begun, in the 1580s, the
Petrarchan sonnet sequence had been available for more than two
centuries as a mode of self-narrative and self-examination. The favored
mode of Calvinistic self-representation by the later seventeenth
century is not the lyric but autobiography, a development along the
lines of the diary (ca. 1580) of the Puritan, Richard Rogers. This
essay will argue that Caelica
witnesses in detail a singular instance
of how a late sixteenth-century poet, well versed in Petrarchan forms
and poetic strategies, redeploys them to voice the essential tenets of
Calvinist self-reform. And this interplay happens at a time when the
emergent prose voice of Puritan autobiography promised, but had yet to
define clearly, an alternative literary aesthetic. The artistic
construction of the Calvinist self in Caelica
is informed by the
English Reformation's iconoclasm and Calvinist soteriology. At
appropriate moments in this essay, I will draw attention to how
contemporary English divines interpret Calvin's strictures on
self-probing, identification of inner error, repentance, and
justification by faith. It is an English Calvinism that meets (and
finds a use for) an English Petrarchanism in Caelica.
The iconic, Petrarchan she, the conventional sign of
Neo-Platonic
aspirations about love, undergoes intense criticism and progressive
fragmentation in the sequence. It is a critical commonplace that the
Elizabethan Petrarchists have toned down the ascetic elements of the
Italian original. The lady continues to be represented in idealist,
Neo-Platonic terms, but in the course of the Elizabethan sequences, she
is also perceived as courtly rather than divine, with a fair mixture of
the courtesan in her. Her distance from the lover is a measure not so
much of her spiritual pre-eminence, but a deliberate ploy to enhance
her desirability. Caelica
takes this development to its late
sixteenth-century, Calvinist conclusion, in disconnecting the material
form of the lady from metaphysical significations. There are occasional
moments in Caelica, as we
shall see, when the Petrarchan paradigm seems
to reassert itself, when the voice of desire in a poem cries out from
amidst the stringent critiques of profane love that surround it. These
eruptions, especially in the middle section when the Calvinist
indictments are conscious and vigorous, are possible because Caelica,
in the manner of Petrarch's Rime
Sparse, can function not only as a
sequence, but also as an assemblage of separate poetic fragments. These
Petrarchan remnants remind the reader of Caelica's origins without
seriously deflecting the Calvinist counter-discourse that begins with
the questioning of the lady's superior virtues.
Caelica opens with a
paean to the lady which restates the
Neo-Platonic aspirations of Petrarchan praise.[4]
The precise catalog of "Love," "Delight," "Vertue," and "Reason" in the
first stanza invokes those ethico-spiritual virtues which
conventionally signify the lady's quasi-divine presence on the one hand
and the lover's metaphysical aspirations on the other. The lover
recognizes that the lady's "wisdom" is "imaged in her words and deeds,"
but the emblematic quality of the Petrarchan she is stated rather than
demonstrated. What one sees is not the figuring of the Petrarchan icon,
but its pieces returned to their subtextual abstractions of "Beauty,"
"honour's fame," "wonder," and "wisdom." These abstractions, in their
turn, take on a certain life in the senses: the fame of honor is "the
ear's sweet music," "wisdom" is like "clear springs" flowing from the
heart, "worth" is both wounding and cure to the speaker.
Yet the image itself of the woman never inhabits this life of
the
senses but is an absence, as though the speaker bypasses the emblem and
offers instead a commentary on the messages it signifies. The speaker's
skills as image-maker are channeled towards the figuration of
fragmented abstractions previously enclosed by a recognizable, feminine
form. While appearing to reconfirm the status of the Neo-Platonic she,
poem I subverts the unity between emblematic form and pure idea, and
presages the speaker's admonition to love in poem X:
Rather goe backe vnto that heauenly quire
Of Natures riches, in her beauties placed,
And there in contemplation feed desire,
Which till it wonder, is not rightly graced;
For those sweet glories, which you doe aspire,
Must, as Ideas only be embraced
Since excellence in other forme enioyed,
Is by descending to her Saints destroyed.
William Perkins, the Calvinist divine whose published work was
extremely popular during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth
centuries, declares: "They [the Roman Catholics] hold . . . that the
Saints in heaven . . . doe make intercession to God for particular men
. . . but this doctrine we flatly renounce . . . the Saints departed
see not the state of the church on earth, much lesse do they know the
thoughts and praiers of men. . . . No creature can bee a Mediatour for
us to God, saving Christ alone, who is . . . the onely Advocate of his
Church."[5]
In Caelica, as a
sign of her descent from pure idea to
metamorphic
form, the lady is made known by several names. The eponymous Caelica,
derived from the Latin caelum,[6]
is also Myra and Cynthia. And the
corruptible and transient nature of forms is underlined in the slippage
of her name between Caelica and Myra in XXXVII, Caelica and Cynthia in
XLVIII, Myra and Cynthia in XLVI, and in the most extreme instance, in
LXXIV, all three. The power of the iconic Petrarchan she-which has
always resided in her singularity and her command of singular
devotion--is considerably diminished through dispersal into fragmented
images. She acquires multiple forms, as the lover discovers mobile
loyalties.
She is, in common with many of the Elizabethan heirs of Laura,
unyielding to the point of being punitive in her response to the
lover's worship (XVIII, XXVII, XXXIV-V); she can also be coquettish
(XXV), duplicitous (XX), and inconstant (XXXII, XXXVI). Caelica
exploits these Neo-Petrarchan modifications of the feminine
ideal--familiar to English readers since Wyatt--to represent fallen
woman. Her imperfections not only render the lover's continued devotion
questionable, but also implicitly indict his fallen judgment. At a much
later moment in the sequence, he will admit: "And while in you my selfe
I seeke to find,/I see that you your selfe haue lost your minde" (LXX).
Joseph Hall, the Calvinist preacher, a friend and client of
Greville, delivered this satiric portrait:
The loue-sicke Poet, whose importune prayer
Repulsed is with resolute dispayre,
Hopeth to conquer his disdainfull dame,
With publique plaints of his conceiued flame.
Then poures he forth in patched Sonettings
His loue, his lust, and loathsome flatterings:
As tho the staring world hangd on his sleeue,
When once he smiles, to laugh: and when he sighs, to grieue.[7]
This attack on the Petrarchan lover and his self-fashioning
represents the brutal face of Calvinistic poetics.[8]
The lover/speaker of Caelica
engages in a more subtle act of inner
iconoclasm that takes as its starting point the error of Petrarchan
devotion. English Calvinists believed that repentance was "the very
substance of all religion, and the whole sum of Christianitie."[9]
Repentance takes the form of self-scrutiny for the purpose of making
known to the reprobate the location and depth of his sin. The diary of
Richard Rogers was written because Rogers wished "to know mine owne
hart better, where I know that much is to be gotten in understaunding
of it, and to be acquainted with the diverse corners of it and what sin
I am most in daunger of and what diligence and meanes I use against any
sin and how I goe under any affliction."[10]
The protean changes of the "hart" are the very substance of
Petrarchan discourse, its repertory of tropes the poetic medium by
which the lover enacts fine discriminations of feelings and desires.
Furthermore, Petrarch's Rime Sparse
and its Elizabethan imitations
offer a narrative in time of a more generalized kind than the type
suggested by the diary. Caelica forges the imaginative connection
between the record of love and the record of error, and reconstructs
the temporal scheme of Petrarchan devotion as Calvinist progress Sub
specie aeternitatis.[11]
Inspired by the austerity of Calvinistic belief, Caelica embarks on a
concerted and thoroughgoing critique of Petrarchan ideology and poetic
construction of love, which is all the more effective because it
deploys those very strategies-situations, topoi, rhetoric-that
Petrarchanism has rendered familiar. Most significantly, this negative
reaction functions as a means to a religious end: anti-Petrarchanism
takes the form of self-examination, the finding and naming of inner
error which is the first stage of the Calvinistic progress towards
repentance and justification.
Calvinism offers no accommodation of material existence except
as an
arena where the determinations of Divine power and grace are seen to
work out to their unquestionable ends. The iconoclastic attack on the
Petrarchan she in Caelica is to be understood within the speaker's
anxiety about his attachment to the physical life, and his recurrent
attempts at breaking that attachment. While the target of poem I of
Caelica is the lady,
poem II turns to the Petrarchan lover's sensuality
that underwrites his complaint that the mistress' domestic pets have
more intimate access to her than he has. This complaint, in poems such
as Sidney's Astrophil and Stella
59, functions on the level of playful
innuendo. In an implied critique of this sexual/bestial exchange, it is
represented by the figurative language of poem II as the actual debased
condition of the lover's relationship with the lady.
In the poem, the bestial invocation of the lady--with its
derogatory
insinuations throughout the poem of unbridled female lust and
cruelty-is co-present with the lover's body, displayed in all its
macabre and repelling injury. Mangled and disemboweled, the lover's
body pleads for favor, "That with thy tongue thy bytings may be
healed." Though confessing to his own helplessness, the lover makes no
concession to the lady-the quasi-beast invited to lick his wounds. in
the self-humbling rhetoric of the Petrarchan lover, the poem exposes
those unspoken and unspeakable tendencies subliminal to Petrarchan
adoration. It is an example of the "importune prayer" of "The loue-sick
Poet" so lamented by Joseph Hall, but it is also a prayer to a bestial
idol; the poem is at once iconoclastic and idolatrous.
The opening poems rehearse the Petrarchan dichotomy of spirit
and
body, the substance of the lover's inwardness. One thinks of the
"authentic" voice of Astrophil speaking from the brink of virtue and
desire. They also plot the realignment of Petrarchan modes of praise
and worship of an ideal Other along Calvinist terms of faith. A process
of rewriting Petrarchanism is clearly at work, and poem III offers a
clue as to its outlines and imperatives. In each of the two stanzas of
the poem, the quatrain draws an idealistic vision of the lady similar
to that in poem I, while the end couplet internalizes the vision.
Together, the stanzas enact a sense of self in which parts correspond
in a unified whole: "If in my heart all Saints else be defaced,/Honour
the shrine, where you alone are placed"; "If in my heart all Nymphs
else be defaced/Honour the shrine, where you alone are placed."
The pagan association of "Nymphs" may signify concessions to
the
erotic, but this decorous rhetoric is hardly adequate to contain the
salacious outcries of animal desire in poem II. The body is largely
written out of this construction of the unitary self. The spiritualized
rhetoric of the couplets is also shot through with iconoclastic fervor;
the "defacing" of "saints" precedes the achievement of a singular self
reconciled to its own internal pressures. Poems I and III may rehearse
the familiar topos of the Petrarchan's lover's triumph over passion,
but the erasure of the body and the iconoclasm are signs that the
triumph is moderated by a covert but unmistakable Calvinistic
discourse. In the language of poem IV, where the speaker pleads with
"Loue" to choose him not by his own "worth" but her "election" (my
italics), the traditional Neo-Platonic figurations of the lady's
superiority and the lover's abjectness again bear the trace of a
Calvinistic rewriting.
The opening poems of Caelica
articulate but also denigrate
desire by
figuring it in a damaged body which is then cut out of the model self.
In doing so, they betray an anxiety about the body which continues to
permeate the first section (V-XXXVII) of the sequence. The lover
perceives his frailty (XV, XXVII) and the lady's (XVIII, XXV-VI), and
sees change in love as the acme of the inconstant condition of
mortality (XXVIII, XXX). It is true that the images of burning and
freezing in XV, the lover's fear in XXVII, as well as the lady's
changeableness in XVIII and XXVI may point as much to emotional as to
physical frailty. But in these poems, emotional frailty is inextricably
linked to the life of the senses, specifically to sight and seeing. And
in many of the poems of the first section, the insight of concupiscent
man is signified by physical disablement. In the speaker's recurrent
identification with blind Cupid, the familiar Renaissance emblem of
concupiscence, the Calvinistic critique of the physical life comes into
sharper focus.
In poem XII, the lover describes how he first took pity on
Cupid:
Thy nakednesse I in my reason clothed,
Mine eyes I gaue thee, so was I deuoted.
But this was only to be betrayed:
No sooner he into mine eyes was gotten,
But straight he clouds them with a seeing blindnesse,
Makes reason wish that reason were forgotten.
Blindness is a sign of the lover's surrender to passion in an
act of
self-betrayal. But "seeing" is coterminous with "blindnesse"; mortal
vision is allowed utterance but then immediately demoted to unseeing.
Here is a critique of passion, but also in a further study of what it
implies, of human reason in debilitating conflict with itself-"makes
reason wish that reason were forgotten."
"Seeing blindnesse" is not just the usual Petrarchan paradox.
To
Calvinists, confidence in reason is a fundamental error. William
Perkins states that when God brings men to Christ, "first, he prepareth
their hearts, that they might be capable of faith." This internal
preparation is by "bruising" or "humbling" men so that through
humiliation, they might obtain a "sight" of their sins? From this
vantage point, "seeing blindnesse" suggests the internalization of
Calvinistic doctrine. The Petrarchan lover as Calvinist reprobate is at
once deprived of his mortal sight but also enabled to see how corrupt
his reason is.
The transition from the opening poems to the poems about
insight and
blindness is marked by poem X. In terms resonant with Calvinist
self-consciousness, the poet states that "Loue, of mans wandring
thoughts the restlesse being" has "fall'n" from the celestial joys to
which it aspires to the speaker's "darkened minde." In this new and
corrupt domicile,
Truth clouds it selfe, Wit serues but to resemble,
Enuie is King, at others good offended,
Memorie doth worlds of wretchednesse assemble,
Passion to ruin passion is intended,
My reason is but power to dissemble;
Then tell me Loue, what glory you diuine
Your selfe can find within this soule of mine?
In the light of this Calvinistic judgment of the fallen mind,
the
later poems on the lover's betrayal by Cupid, and his realization that
he will surely die, reenact the Fall. These poems take on the character
of an iconoclastic project, resignifying the Petrarchan paradox of
"seeing blindnesse" as fallen reason afflicted with knowledge of its
own corruption from which it also knowingly recoils. The poem chips
away at the long-established Petrarchan model of inner complexity and
exposes its own paradoxical modes of consciousness and rhetoric as its
very source of error. Greville rewrites the Petrarchan lover as the
object lesson of the Fall and its impact on human existence.
However, this Calvinistic vantage point is not immediately
apparent
to the speaker of the poems. That this is so can be seen by comparing
the Cupid poems of the first section with those of the middle section.
Of the first forty poems, Cupid figures in seventeen, most of the time
as a juvenile participant in the drama of courtship whose maneuvers the
speaker grapples with but hardly understands. In the middle section,
Cupid (with a single exception, poem LXXVI, which I shall discuss
later) is no longer a central figure or subject of entire poems; he
appears marginally in only ten poems before the farewell to love in
LXXXIV. Cupid has always played the role of intermediary between the
speaker and the lady. His recession as dramatic figure signals a change
in the ways the speaker understands and represents himself. Instead of
experiencing and figuring himself in terms of Cupid's dramatic antics,
he increasingly steps back to take the measure of Cupid's exercise of
power without responsibility:
Sweet Cupids shafts like Destinie
Deo causelesse good or ill decree;
Desert is borne out of his bow,
Reward vpon his wing doth goe;
What fooles are they that haue not knowne,
That Loue likes no Lawes but his owne.
Furthermore, desire is seen not simply as a function of the
erotic
but a complex interplay of subliminal motivations. In LXII, Cupid is
harnessed with Mars and Mercury and man's worship of these pagan gods
demystified:
Metcurie, Cupid, Mars, they be no Gods,
But humane Idols, built vp by desire,
Fruit of our boughs, whence heauen maketh rods,
And babyes too for child-thoughts that aspire:
Who sees their glories, on the earth must prye;
Who seeks true glory must looke to the skye.
The act of "Idol"-breaking here is the logical extension from
the
defacement of "Saints." Both implicitly place Petrarchan discourse as
another episode in man's aberrant history. The Augustinian idea of
history as 'decline is stated in XLIV where the speaker contrasts the
"Golden Age" of the past with the "Brasen Age" of the present and
places Caelica firmly in the latter. The cherished Petrarchan icons of
the self-in-love and the lady cannot be fragmented without implications
for the ideology of love and worship which guarantees them. The
concluding couplet of LXII, "Who sees their glories, on the earth must
prye;/Who seeks true glory must looke to the skye," seems to point
backwards to the perspective of the opening. But the implicit reminder
that "Caelica" originates from caelum, the sky, is charged with the
ironical awareness of the radical change in the firmaments which the
poem's iconoclasm advances.
It is this awareness that marks the distinct shift from the
perplexed and frustrated negotations with Cupid in the first section
and the conscious indictments of love in the middle section. From the
Calvinistic vantage point, the Petrarchan discourse of the first
section acquires a distinctively postlapsarian character. Early in the
middle section, in poem XXXIX, the lover laments:
The pride of Flesh by reach of humane wit,
Did purpose once to ouer-reach the skye;
And where before God drown'd the world for it,
Yet Babylon it built vp, not to dye.
God knew these fooles how foolishly they wrought,
That Destiny with Policie would breake,
Straight none could tell his fellow what he thought,
Their tongues were chang'd, & men not taught to speake:
So I that heauenly peace would comprehend,
In mortall seat of Caelica's faire heart,
To babylon my selfe there, did intend,
With naturall kindnesse, and with passions art:
But when I thought my selfe of her selfe free,
All's chang'd: she vnderstands all men but me.
The Old Testament allusion situates the lover's experience as
the
latest intertext in a typological reading of history. Petrarchan
discourse--and its representation of the inner self--is reinserted into
the biblical scheme of things, dislodged from its traditionally
privileged mediation of reading and writing man's experience of love.
There is a significant transition from "Babylon" to "babylon" which
Bullough glosses as a verb, meaning "elevate."[13]
William Perkins wrote that the Gospel was 'as it were the conduit pipe
of the Holy Ghost to fashion and derive faith into the soul; by which
faith they which believe do, as with an hand, apprehend Christ's
righteousness."[14]
Something very like what Perkins is saying is at work in the poem. The
reading of the Biblical example of "Babylon" is internalized--"to
babylon myself"--in the lover. A Biblical lesson has illuminated his
fallen consciousness, and enables him to pinpoint his source of
error-"to babylon my selfe there, did intend" (my italics).[15]
The Calvinistic infiltration of Petrarchan discourse can be
seen in
the quasi-pulpit rhetoric of the first two stanzas. It continues in the
formal move from the admonitory to the more familiar topos of the
lover's self-deception in the last stanza, and the way in which this
move affects the poem's outcome. The poem may seem to end on an
indecisive note reiterating the lover's characteristic helplessness at
his own plight. But as a response to the admonitions which precede it,
the last stanza reads like a sinner's confession, in which the
knowledge that he cannot extricate himself from sin marks the first
step to spiritual recovery. Caelica is transformed, after the
reprobate's self-scrutiny, from the "mortall seat" of "heavenly peace"
to the most recent example of the whore of Babylon--a grim joke at the
expense of both the lady and the gentleman: "All's chang'd: she
vnderstands all men but me." The poems of the middle section which I
have discussed, and others like them, seem to add up to a more
determinedly intrusive Calvinistic discourse. And yet it is within the
Petrarchan nature of Caelica
to function as both a connected sequence,
and a succession of separate poetic moments. The plural, disparate form
of the Petrarchan sequence, with its repetitions, contradictions, and
anomalies, is one strong reason for the attenuation of the Petrarchan
self. To look at Caelica in
this way is to imply that while certain
poems may prescribe a reading of those among which they are placed,
this prescription cannot be a matter of absolute certainty, that is to
say, become a proscriptive stricture.
Poem XL immediately follows the "babylonic" self-consciousness
of XXXIX:
The nurse-life Wheat within his greene huske growing,
Flatters our hope and tickles our desire,
Natures true riches in sweet beauties shewing,
Which set all hearts, with labours loue, on fire.
No lesse faire is the Wheat when golden eare
Showes vnto hope the ioyes of neare enjoying:
Faire and sweet is the bud, more sweet and faire
The Rose, which proues that time is not destroying.
Cuelica, your youth, the morning of delight,
Enamel'd o're with beauties white and red,
All sense and thoughts did to beleefe inuite,
That Loue and Glorie there are brought to bed;
And your ripe yeeres loue-noone (he goes no higher)
Turnes all the spirits of Man into desire.
The celebration of human passion in terms of Nature is a
time-honored literary practice; Nature, in the Rime Sparse, is the
arena of signification where the ascetic and the erotic engage in
rhythmic and cyclical negotiations, defining each other through
likeness and difference. The octave of poem XL gives this conventional
practice a new lease on life in the closely wrought similitudes that
give passion physical substance, but also render it mysterious and
unknowable. The second quatrain suggests an image of desire at the
moment of "neare-enioying" but also moves past it, through the images
of the budding and full-blown rose, to the moment of desire's
gratification.
This is also the moment when the subterranean fear of
mortality, of
desire's destruction, is closest to the surface. It is contained in the
sensuous "rose," the traditional sign of carpe diem, and it elicits the
rather awkward assertion from the speaker, "which proues that time is
not destroying" (in which "proues" carries an anxious ambiguity). The
sestet, in contrast, never comes this far. The synecdochic exchanges of
natural and human desire bring the speaker to the point of passion's
climax and then fix him there. Desire becomes perpetual; its ruin
perpetually held in abeyance because the gratification which it
anticipates remains a matter of "beleefe," an invitation never taken up.
It is possible but unnecessary to read poem XL as an example
of the
self-deluding fantasy of concupiscent, fallen man. There is no
suggestion in the poem that the erotic is in any sense compatible with
the spiritual. But if the recognition of the spirit's triumph is an
essential element of the sequence's Calvinistic determinism, then the
poem invokes a countervailing discourse and its moment of glory. On the
same lines, Cupid, sidelined and--with Mars and Mercury--the object of
iconoclasm in LXII, completely appropriates the subject position of the
Petrarchan 'I' in LXXVI:
I, when I haue shot one shaft at my mother,
That her desires a-foote thinke all her owne,
Then straight draw vp my bow to strike another,
For Gods are best by discontentment knowne.
And when I see the poore forsaken sprite,
Like sicke men, whom the Doctor saith must dye,
Sometime with rage and strength of passion fight,
Then languishing enquire what life might buy:
I smile to see Desire is neuer wise,
But warres with Change, which is her paradise.
Again, this poem might read as an indictment of desire. But it
also
brings back vividly the image of the ailing body still locked in a
violent struggle with its mortality.
At its most extreme, in poem LVI, desire assumes Ovidian
proportions. In an erotic dream-like sequence, the lustful speaker
steps out under a starry light in search of the lady, Cynthia, until he
stands "like Articke pole" (37) beside her "Naked on a bed of play"
(46). He seems unaware of any moral depravity; indeed, his tone in
conclusion is self-congratulatory as he turns away from the
Neo-Platonic heavens to survey what he is about to enjoy:
Let no Loue-desiring heart,
In the Starres goe seeke his fate,
Loue is onely Natures art,
Wonder hinders Loue and Hate.
None can well behold with eyes,
But what vnderneath him lies.
Poem LVI and other poetic moments dispersed in the middle
section
suggest that the voice of desire will not be totally suppresssed or
silenced; it continues to penetrate the stringent critique of human
love and history.
From the persistent perspective of desire, the conventional
farewell
to Cupid in LXXXIV seems at first sight no more than pro forma: "But
Cupid now farewell, I will goe play me,/With thoughts that please me
lesse, & lesse betray me." This final bidding seems another
rehearsal of "Ile hold no more, false Caelica, liue free;/Seeme faire
to all the world, and foule to me" in XLII, or "And I no more will
stirre this earthly dust,/Wherein I lose my name, to take on lust" in
LXXI. The perspective of desire, crisscrossed with Calvinistic lines of
thought, charts the outlines of an inner conflict that is recognizably
Petrarchan in its origins and mode of expression. In this light, the
Calvinistic discourse of the middle section appears not only as a
critique of Petrarchan discourse, but also ironically exploits what it
sets out to oppose. The consequence of this irony is an extreme
indeterminacy of self, veering from austere convictions to the pained
expressions of desire unrequited. The nadir of this self is marked by
the destabilization of "Greville" as "Greville" in LXXXIII. His
awareness of inner pain and emptiness,
Forlorne desires my Clocke to tell me euery day,
That time hath stolne Loue, Life and All but my distresse away.
For Musicke heauy sighes, my Walke an inward woe,
Which like a shadow euer shall before my body goe:
And I my selfe am he, that doth with none compare,
Except in woes and lacke of worth; whose states more wretched are.
Let no man aske my name, nor what else I should be;
For Greiv-Ill, paine, forlorne estate doe best decipher me,
resonates in the prose of another Calvinist penitent, John
Winthrop, who describes how the Lord laid
[me] lower in myne owne eyes then at any time before, and
showed me
the emptiness of all my guifts, and parts; left mee neither power nor
will . . . I knew I was worthy of nothing for I knew I could doe
nothing for him or for my selfe. I could only mourn, and weep to think
of free mercy to such a vile wretch as I was.[16]
Petrarchan situations and rhetoric provide the means by which
doctrine is enacted, dramatized, and authenticated as inner conflict.
The problem, of course, is that the progressive identification of error
within Petrarchan terms has led to the spiritual and moral bankruptcy
of the Petrarchan self. To what extent can the artistic strategies of
the Petrarchan convention be still deployed when it is perceived as
entirely corrupt? This is a problem that is unique to Caelica and
distinguishes it from sequences written and completed during the vogue
of Elizabethan sonneteering: Astrophil
and Stella, Amoretti, Delia, and
Shakespeare's Sonnets. While
the indeterminate self defines the outcome
of major Elizabethan sequences, Caelica consciously closes off this
conventionally open-ended self in the final section (LXXXV-CIX). The
farewell to Cupid in LXXXIV, which has seemed a familiarly
inconsequential gesture, becomes a crucial point of departure:
I bow'd not to thy image for succession,
Nor bound thy bow to shoot reformed kindnesse,
Thy playes of hope and feare were my confession,
The spectacles to my life was thy blindnesse;
But Cupid now farewell, I will goe play me,
With thoughts that please me lesse, & lesse betray me.
Implicit in this farewell is not only the resolute rejection
of the
self understood and represented in profane terms. As the ultimate sign
of the self-in-love, Cupid is determinedly restrictive. The confinement
of earthly love to the erotic rules out the interpenetration of the
world and the spirit inscribed in the Petrarchan model of the
self-in-love. The body, regarded as irreparably disabled, is to be
excised rather than accommodated. The farewell is not only an act of
individual renunciation; it attempts to close off discursive interplay
by shutting down the Petrarchan system, and initiates an alternative
mode of existential and textual complexity. Poem LXXXV proclaims a
purged and puristic redefinition of love and self:
Loue is the Peace, whereto all thoughts doe striue,
Done and begun with all our powers in one:
The first and last in vs that is aliue,
End of the good, and therewith pleas'd alone.
Perfections spirit, Goddesse of the minde,
Passed through hope, desire, griefe and feare,
A simple Goodnesse in the flesh refin'd,
Which of the ioyes to come doth witnesse beare.
Constant, because it sees no cause to varie,
A Quintessence of Passions ouerthrowne,
Rais'd aboue all that change of obiects carry,
A Nature by no other nature knowne:
For Glorie's of eternitie a frame,
That by all bodies else obscures her name.
An all-powerful metaphysical desire, signified by "thoughts"
in line
1, has taken over fleshly desire, belonging to eyesight. Here, then, is
the destination of the passage "through hope, desire, grief and fear,"
a summary of the fretful record of the preceding poems, a translation
of gratification forever withheld to hopeful anticipatior, of "joys to
come."
And yet the sestet proceeds to define "Loue" in precisely
those
terms which the octave implies have been cast aside. For all its
protestations of purity, "Loue," the codeword of a revised inner self,
is definable by language no other than that which also signifies its
antithesis. The absolute difference of "Loue" can hardly be made known
without a knowledge of those elements--"Passions," "change"-that
precede it, against which it is defined, and hence are implicated in
its being. This covert, binary process has left a trace in the
quasi-assonance of "Glorie's" and "bodies" in the end couplet which
otherwise asserts the triumph of the abstract and the timeless over the
phenomenal.
The farewell to Petrarchan discourse could be interpreted as a
mark
of faith operating internally to enable repentance in the form of utter
rejection of a self perceived as entirely corrupt. In Calvinistic
belief, men, of their own abilities, are incapable of repentance; it
could only happen as a sign of the ingrafting of divine grace. Although
the residues of a former self linger in language, interior reformation
must be manifest by a new mode of conduct, and among other external
signs, the adoption of a new manner of speech.[17]
In the final section, the space vacated by Petrarchan
discourse is
to be filled by a reconstructed rhetoric of praise, of worship, of the
inner self. And yet time and again, this practice of rhetoric comes up
against the Calvinist suspicion of deceptive forms. One outstanding
consequence of this which we can see in the final poems is an anxiety
about verbal forms and their relations with the reformed inner self.
Some of the poems, which hark back to the pulpit rhetoric of the
previous section, explicitly counsel vigilance against linguistic
deception. In poem XCII, the speaker places manipulations of language
in relations of power:
Nobilitie, this pretious treasure is,
Laid vp in secret mysteries of State,
Kings creature, subiections gilded blisse,
Where grace, not merit, seems to gouerne fate.
Mankinde I thinke to be this rod diuine,
For to the greatest euer they incline.
Eloquence, that is but wisdome speaking well,
(The Poets faigne) did make the sauage tame;
Of eares and hearts chain'd vnto tongues they tell;
I thinke Nobilitie to be the same:
For be they fooles, or speake they without wit,
We hold them wise, we fooles be-wonder it.
The speaker undermines the supposed repository in "Nobilitie"
of
"secret mysteries of State" and the almost mystical power of
"Eloquence" to tame the "sauage." He unveils the deceptions common to
both by equating the severed connection between "grace" and "merit"
with that between language and thought. This is in explicit contrast to
his description of the "Golden-Age" in poem XLIV where "Desire was
free, and Beauties first-begotten;/Beauty then neither net, nor made by
art,/Words out of thoughts brought forth, and not forgotten" (my
italics). Under the corrupt circumstances of the present, "Eloquence"
is nothing but vacuous display, captivating "ears and hearts" in the
same way as corrupt eyesight used to be enamored of what it sees. This
mistrust of language is elaborated in "A Treatie of Humane Learning"
where, as part of a general attack upon the different aspects of
classical learning, Greville disparages "Eloquence" as but "the craft
of words" designed "to flatter, or beseech,/Insinuate, or perswade."
The "true Art of Eloquence," he adds, in lines reminiscent of Caelica
XLIV, should be "formes of speech,/Such as from liuing wisdomes doe
proceed," and its task is "to declare/What things in Nature good, or
euill are" (Bullough, p. 181).
To return to XCII, one could argue that the speaker in the
poem is
referring to certain rhetorical uses of language and not to how
language operates in general. Putting aside for the moment the
self-referential implications of this line of argument, it can be
further said that the speaker is only indicting a specific poetical
language and its superfluity to a genuinely reformed inner self. But
there is surely an inescapable trap for the Calvinist having to speak
in a language that is fallen. In this section, one can find evidence of
the speaker's watchfulness of this inner self in the very process of
being reconstructed in language. For example, in poem LXXXIX, he
admonishes:
We seeme more inwardly to know the Sonne,
And see our owne saluation in his blood;
When this is said, we thinke the worke is done,
And with the Father hold our portion good:
As if true life within these words were laid,
For him that in life, neuer words obey'd.
Doubts about language, its eloquence or more importantly, its
treachery against the spirit's repossession of the inner world have
significant implications for the speaker's devotional progress. Poem
XCIX, for example, reveals an interior landscape from which linguistic
signs are all but absent:
Downe in the depth of mine iniquity,
That vgly center of infernall spirits;
Where each sinne feeles her owne deformity,
In these peculiar torments she inherits,
Depriu'd of humane graces, and diuine,
Euen there appeares this sauing God of mine.
And in this fatall mirrour of transgression,
Shewes man as fruit of his degeneration,
The errours ugly infinite impression,
Which beares the faithlesse downe to desperation;
Depriu'd of humane graces and diuine,
Euen there appeares this sauing God of mine.
In power and truth, Almighty and eternall,
Which on the sinne reflects strange desolation,
With glory scourging all the Sprites infernall,
And vncreated hell with vnpriuation;
Depriu'd of humane graces, not diuine,
Euen there appeares this sauing God of mine.
For on this sp'rituall Crosse condemned lying,
To paines infernall by eternall doome,
I see my Sauiour for the same sinnes dying,
And from that hell I fear'd, to free me, come;
Depriu'd of humane graces, not diuine,
Thus hath his death rais'd up this soule of mine.
The passions of the tormented soul preoccupy the first
quatrain of
each stanza and are pitted against the relative stability of the
couplet refrain. The torments are conceived as non-verbal processes:
the feelings of deformity in the first stanza, the reflection of
degeneration's image in the second and the third, and the vision of the
Crucifix in the last.
At the same time, the actual conversion in the couplet refrain
of
the first three stanzas happens in despite of-or "refrains" from-the
process of the linguistic. it rests on the repetitions of the visual:
"Euen there appeares this sauing God of mine" (my italics). This visual
effect is not conjured by language-the subject does not cry out de
profundis-but is the product of revelation; the speaker is the passive
recipient of the vision. The climax of the conversion occurs at the
moment when he "see[s]" the image of the Crucifix. The specular shapes
of "degeneration" which haunt the speaker are displaced by this
authentic visual sign of Divine presence within. It is contradistinct
from the earlier image of "the Sonne" actively conjured by the "words"
(LXXXIX) of the sinner.
The speaker's gaze, directed at the beginning towards an
immaterial
Other, turns, in the final moments of the sequence, inwards towards an
interior construct justified by a masculine, Divine presence, who, in
His patient endurance of suffering partakes of traditional feminine
qualities. The revealed image of the "Sauiour . . . dying" becomes the
cynosure of the speaker's gaze, and confirms the burden of mortality
which is also the burden of the spirit; the Crucifixion signifies
bodily affliction as the site of spiritual affliction. The body
reinserts itself into a discourse of the self which so overtly
proscribes its presence.
The conception of spiritual progress as more or less
independent of
linguistic signs poses problems for the speaker in his alternative
position as evangelical preacher in the final section, for he can
hardly persuade without using the very medium which he suspects. His
task of conversion cannot be performed without implicit acknowledgement
that he and his audience, or readership, belong to a community
constituted in the main by a shared common language. In important ways,
the fostering of a spiritual community depends on the effectiveness
with which the preacher deploys the resources of language. In the
reconstruction of a shared rhetoric, we can see the poet-preacher's
experiment with a language that admits instability without surrendering
the claim to Truth. Poem LXXXVI is a good example:
The Earth with thunder tome, with fire blasted,
With waters drowned, with windie palsey shaken
Cannot for this with heauen be distasted,
Since thunder, raine and winds from earth are taken:
Man torne with Loue, with inward furies blasted,
Drown'd with despaire, with fleshly lustings shaken,
Cannot for this with heauen be distasted,
Loue, furie, lustings out of man are taken.
Then Man, endure thy selfe, those clouds will vanish;
Life is a Top which whipping Sorrow driueth;
Wisdome must beare what our flesh cannot banish,
The humble leade, the stubborne bootlesse striueth:
Or Man, forsake thy selfe, to heauen turne thee,
Her flames enlighten Nature, neuer burne thee.
The poem uses a language of public prophecy-the self is now
generic,
the self of "Man"--a language intertextual with the Old Testament, and
derives its justification from this intertextuality. The poem also
returns the meteorological affliction to its proper seat of
signification within the human condition. Sound and fury they may be,
related to each other in some unstable, elemental system, but they are
also the specular forms of "inward furies "that have plagued men from
time immemorial.[18]
The speaker persuades by offering two paths of conversion:
through
suffering the mortification of the flesh-"Then Man, endure thy
selfe,"-or spiritual transcendence-"Or Man, forsake thyselfe." The
endurance of the life of the body becomes a sign of that patience
which, in turn, signifies spiritual regeneration. Through the
convoluted passage of "Love, fury, lustings," the body becomes
reattached to its spiritual nexus, from which it has been severed, and
to which it has appeared as dichotomous.
A number of poems (C, CI, CIII-VIII) discuss and explore a
range of
misconceptions. Linking these poems with the devotional poems focused
on the interior struggles of the 'I' (XCVIII-IX, CII) are the eyes that
signify the perceptual powers of the illuminated spirit. "In Night,"
says the speaker in poem C:
when colours all to blacke are cast,
Distinction lost, or gone downe with the light;
The eye a watch to inward senses plac'd,
Not seeing, yet still hauing power of sight,
And from this nothing seene, tels newes of devils,
Which but expressions be of inward euils.
Because man is implicated in the world of the flesh, he
partakes of
all its disabilities, particularly those which place him within the
human community. In its negotiations with the external world, the inner
self is subject to unstable visual and linguistic signs. Poem CIX, the
last of the sequence, enacts the closure of the problematic relations
of visual and linguistic signs and the reformed self:
Syon lyes waste, and thy lerusalem,
O Lord, is falne to vtter desolation,
Against thy Prophets, and thy holy men,
The sinne hath wrought a fatall combination,
Prophan'd thy name, thy worship ouerthrowne,
And made thee liuing Lord, a God vnknowne.
Thy powerfull lawes, thy wonders of creation,
Thy Word incarnate, glorious heauen, darke hell,
Lye shadowed vnder Mans degeneration,
Thy Christ still crucifi'd for doing well,
Impiety, O Lord, sits on thy throne,
Which makes thee liuing Light, A God vnknown.
Mans superstition hath thy truths entomb'd,
His Atheisme againe her pomps defaceth,
That sensuall vnsatiable vaste wombe
Of thy seene Church, thy vnseene Church disgraceth;
There liues no truth with them that seem thine own,
Which makes thee liuing Lord, a God vnknowne.
Yet vnto thee, Lord, (mirrour of transgression)
Wee, who for earthly Idols, haue forsaken
Thy heauenly Image (sinlesse pure impression)
And so in nets of vanity lye taken,
All desolate implore that to thine owne,
Lord, thou no longer liue a God vnknowne.
Yet Lord let Israels plagues not be eternall,
Nor sinne for euer cloud thy sacred Mountaines,
Nor with false flames spirituall but infernail,
Dry up thy mercies euer springing fountaines,
Rather, sweet Iesus, fill vp time and come,
To yeeld the sinne her euerlasting doome.
Like poem XCIX, 'Downe in the depth of mine iniquity," this
poem is
prayer-like, with the couplet at the end of each stanza performing the
function of refrain. The preacher transforms the devotional moment into
a moment of communal self-revaluation, assuming the plural voice-"Wee"
in stanza four-and articulating the interior desires of his spiritual
flock. In the closing moment of the narrative of spiritual progress,
the poem constructs the rhetoric of assurance, and also performs the
function of making assurance known. The "wee" deploys the images and
registers of the Old Testament voice of the chosen people of Israel to
signify, and also to confirm, their election. The biblical intertext
is, of course, Isaiah 64:10. And through this language, the subsumed
self, the "wee," and the sequence, place themselves in an unbroken and
scripturally justified history. But the poem also revises the Old
Testament from the perspective of a New Testament inwardness in which
"Christ [is] still crucifi'd," and anticipates the final vision of the
Second Coming--"Rather, sweet Iesus, fill vp time and come,/To yeeld
the sinne her euerlasting doome." It encloses private insight made
known in a public idiom and Revelational history, conjoins inwardness
and communication, time and eternity.
Much of Caelica
witnesses the struggle between two discursive
constructions of selfhood and its place in time and eternity. That this
is so should hardly be surprising considering that Caelica has its
roots in the 1580s but, unlike its contemporaries, reaches beyond to
another, increasingly divisive age. Indeed the Calvinistic possession
of the discursive field of the sequence advances, and is symptomatic
of, this division.
NOTES
1
Morris
W. Croll's doctoral dissertation later published as The Works of Fulke
Greville (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1903), pioneered the
study of
poems from Caelica. From Croll, Geoffrey Bullough draws the argument
that Caelica is "a collection . . . divided into two parts, the first
of love-poems and the second of political and religious poems . . .
substantially presented in the order in which it was written."
"Introduction," Poems and Dramas of Fulke Greville, First Lord Brooke,
2 vols. (London and Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd, 1938), 1:37. This in
turn develops into a reading of Caelica as a record of Greville's
artistic and spiritual growth which adapts itself well to and is
enhanced by Ronald Rebholz's biography, The Life ofFulke Greville,
First Lord Brooke (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1971). Critics who have
approached Caelica from the dual perspectives of Greville's life and
Elizabethan poetic and philosophical traditions include William Frost,
Fulke Greville's "Caelica": An Evaluation (VT: printed privately by The
Vermont Printing Co., 1942); Thom Gunn, ed., Selected Poems ofFulke
Greville (London: Faber and Faber, 1968); Richard Waswo, The Fatal
Mirror: Themes and Techniques in the Poetry of Fulke Greville
(Charlottesville, VA: Univ. Press of Virginia, 1972), pp. 9-41; Charles
Larson, Fulke Greville (Boston: Twayne-G.K. Hall, 1980), pp. 25-42,
109-136.
2
Profane
poems from the early sections of Caelica are referred to in Rebholz's
study of Greville's youth, while the Calvinist lyrics of the final
section offer material for Rebholz's chapter on Greville, "The Reformed
Christian" (ch. 13). Yvor Winters's essay, "The 16th Century Lyric in
England: A Critical and Historical Reinterpretation," Poetry 53, 5
(January 1939): 25872 (part 1); 320-35 (part 2); Poetry 54, 1 (April
1939): 35-51 (part 3); rev. and rpt. in Forms of Discovery (Chicago:
Alan Swallow, 1967), ch. 1, pioneered the study of Greville's poetic
style in this century. D.L. Peterson considers both Wyatt and Greville
as important exponents of the "plain style" of writing in the sixteenth
century. His book, The English Lyric from Wyatt to Donne (Princeton:
Princeton Univ. Press, 1967), and Norman Farmer, Jr.'s "Fulke Grevi!le
and the Poetic of the Plain Style," TSLL 11, 1 (Spring 1969): 657-70
develop Winters's ideas.
3
Caelica
was begun in the 1580s, and revised and expanded throughout Greville's
lifetime until shortly before his death in 1628. For a discussion of
dating, see the introduction to Bullough, Poems and Dramas, vol. 1,
G.A. Wilkes, "The Sequence of Writings ofFulke Greville, Lord Brooke,"
SP 56, 3 (July 1959): 489-503, and Rebholz, Life, Appendix I. A
reconsideration of the dating and the biographical approach to Caelica
which follows from it lies outside the scope of this article. But this
article does raise the question of whether the model of the Calvinist
self is the consequence of a deliberate arrangement of the poems of
Caelica along ideological lines. In "The Rewriting of Petrarch: Sidney
and the Languages of Sixteenth-Century Poetry," in Sir Philip Sidney
and the Interpretation of Renaissance Culture (London: Croom Helm,
1984), pp. 69-83, Gary Waller discusses PEtrarchanism's domination of
the discourse of love in the Renaissance, and proposes a Bakhtinian
reading of Astrophil and Stella as a discursive negotiation of
Petrarchanism and English Reformation ideology.
4
All quotations of Caelica and other Greville poems are from Bullough,
Poems and Dramas, vol. 1.
5
Willism
Perkins, Workes, 3 vols. (London: 1612-13), 1:603-604. 6 See Frances
Yates, "Fulke Greville," TLS, 7 August 1937, p. 576.
7
Virgidemiarvm (1598) "Sat. VII," rpt. Collected Poems of Joseph Hall,
ed. A. Davenport (Liverpool: Liverpool Univ. Press, 1949), p. 18.
8
Ernest
B. Gilman has studied the different ways in which writers, schooled in
Italian Renaissance poetics, manage the contrary pressure of a
Calvinist ethos hostile to images and imaginative literature. Gilman
sees tension, conflict, accommodation; but neither in the poetry of
Spenser, Donne, and Milton, nor in the emblems of Francis Quarles, does
an aesthetics of reconciliation present itself. Gilman, lconoclasm and
Poetry in the English Reformation (Chicago and London: Univ. of Chicago
Press, 1986). Also see, in this issue of SEL, Peter C. Herman, "The
Shepheardes Calender and Renaissance Antipoetic Sentiment."
9
John Udall, Certaine Sermons, Taken Out of Several Places of Scripture
(London, 1596), sigs. H.iiiv, I.iiv.
10
"The
Diary of Richard Rogers," in Two Elizabethan Puritan Diaries, ed. M.M.
Knappen (Chicago: American Society of Church History, 1933), p. 62.
11
Recently,
Patrick Collinson has proposed three dialectical stages in the
interaction of religion and culture in Reformation England. In the
first stage, "Protestantism embraced the cultural forms which already
existed and employed them for its own purposes, both instructively and
as polemical weapons against its own opponents." During the second
stage, which sees the ascendancy of Puritanism, "many protestant
publicists turned their backs on these same cultural media, which now
became the enemy no less than popery itself." The consequence is a
separation, unprecedented in English literary history, of the sacred
from the secular which, in turn, fuels the "biblicism" of the third
stage, when "an authentically protestant literary culture emerged." The
Birthpangs of Protestant England (London: Macmillan, 1988), p. 98.
12
Perkins, Workes, 1:5.
13
The OED cites this as the single instance of the usage of "babylon" to
mean 'to place or establish in a magnificent abode."
14
Perkins, Workes, 3:259.
15
In
discussing Quaker symbolism, Owen Watkins observes that "the
identification of Biblical Babylon with a man's inner self was
consistent with the practice of finding the true importance of all
revelation in subjective experience" (The Puritan Experience [London:
Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1972], p. 215).
16
Winthrop
Papers, 1:158-59, cited in John Morgan, Godly Learning: Puritan
Attitudes towards Reason, Learning, and Education, 1560-1640
(Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1986), p. 32.
17
Puritans
believe that interior reform is manifested in outward changes which
signify sanctification. These changes involve renouncing dissolute
habits of the past and acquiring a new manner of speech and new
company. See Charles H. George and Katherine George, The Protestant
Mind of the English Reformation, 1570-1640 (Princeton: Princeton Univ.
Press, 1961), pp. 95-114. The development of a new Reformed style of
preaching is the subject of J.W. Blench's Preaching in England in the
late Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries: A Study of English Sermons
1450-c.1600 (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1964), pp. 168 if. For a
discussion of the style and diction considered appropriate to a Puritan
sermon, see Morgan, Godly Learning, ch. 7.
18
The
common language of Puritan conversion enters into the discourse of
another godly believer, Robert Bolton, who describes that "[t]he first
newes he heard of GOD was not by any soft and still voice, but in
terrible tempests and thunder, the LORD running upon him as a gyant,
taking him by the necke and shaking him to peeces, as he did Iob;
beating him to the very ground, as he did Paul." Last &Learned
Worke (London, 1632), "Life of Bolton," sig. b5, cited in Morgan, Godly
Learning, p. 31.
~~~~~~~~
By ELAINE Y.L. HO
Elaine Y.L. Ho is a lecturer in the Department of English
rhetoric,
and is working on a book on Fulke Greville as Radical Protestant writer.