In the Valhalla of English literature
Anne Manning is sure of a little and safe place.
Her studies of great men, in which her imagination
fills in the hiatus which history has left, are not
only literature in themselves, but they are a service
to literature: it is quite conceivable that the
ordinary reader with no very keen flair for
poetry will realise John Milton and appraise him more
highly, having read Mary Powell and its sequel,
Deborah’s Diary, than having read Paradise
Lost. In The Household of Sir Thomas More
she had for hero one of the most charming, whimsical,
lovable, heroical men God ever created, by the creation
of whose like He puts to shame all that men may accomplish
in their literature. In John Milton, whose first
wife Mary Powell was, Miss Manning has a hero who,
though a supreme poet, was “gey ill to live
with,” and it is a triumph of her art that she
makes us compunctious for the great poet even while
we appreciate the difficulties that fell to the lot
of his women-kind. John Milton, a Parliament
man and a Puritan, married at the age of thirty-four,
Mary Powell, a seventeen-year-old girl, the daughter
of an Oxfordshire squire, who, with his family, was
devoted to the King. It was at one of the bitterest
moments of the conflict between King and Parliament,
and it was a complication in the affair of the marriage
that Mary Powell’s father was in debt five hundred
pounds to Milton. The marriage took place.
Milton and his young wife set up housekeeping in
lodgings in Aldersgate Street over against St. Bride’s
Churchyard, a very different place indeed from Forest
Hill, Shotover, by Oxford, Mary Powell’s dear
country home. They were together barely a month
when Mary Powell, on report of her father’s
illness, had leave to revisit him, being given permission
to absent herself from her husband’s side from
mid-August till Michaelmas. She did not return
at Michaelmas; nor for some two years was there a
reconciliation between the bride and groom of a month.
During those two years Milton published his pamphlet,
On the Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce, begun
while his few-weeks-old bride was still with him.
In this pamphlet he states with violence his opinion
that a husband should be permitted to put away his
wife “for lack of a fit and matchable conversation,”
which would point to very slender agreement between
the girl of seventeen and the poet of thirty-four.
This was that Mary Powell, who afterwards bore him
four children, who died in childbirth with the youngest,
Deborah (of the Diary), and who is consecrated
in one of the loveliest and most poignant of English
sonnets.
Methought I saw my late-espoused Saint
Brought to me like Alkestis
from the grave,
Whom Jove’s great son
to her glad husband gave,
Rescued from death by force,
though pale and faint.
Mine, as whom washed from spot of child-bed
taint
Purification in the Old Law
did save;
And such, as yet once more,
I trust to have
Full sight of her in Heaven
without restraint,
Came vested all in white, pure as her
mind:
Her face was veiled, yet to
my fancied sight
Love, sweetness, goodness,
in her person shined
So clear, as in no face with more delight.
But oh! as to embrace me she inclined,
I waked; she fled; and Day brought back
my Night.
It is a far cry from the woman so
enshrined to the child of seventeen years who was
without “fit and matchable conversation”
for her irritable, intolerant poet-husband.
A good many serious writers have conjectured
and wondered over this little tragedy of Milton’s
young married life: but since all must needs
be conjecture one is obliged to say that Miss Manning,
with her gift of delicate imagination and exquisite
writing, has conjectured more excellently than the
historians. She does not “play the sedulous
ape” to Milton or Mary Powell: but if one
could imagine a gentle and tender Boswell to these
two, then Miss Manning has well proved her aptitude
for the place. Of Mary Powell she has made a
charming creature. The diary of Mary Powell
is full of sweet country smells and sights and sounds.
Mary Powell herself is as sweet as her flowers, frank,
honest, loving and tender. Her diary catches
for us all the enchantment of an old garden; we hear
Mary Powell’s bees buzz in the mignonette and
lavender; we see her pleached garden alleys; we loiter
with her on the bowling-green, by the fish ponds,
in the still-room, the dairy and the pantry.
The smell of aromatic box on a hot summer of long
ago is in our nostrils. We realise all the personages the
impulsive, hot-headed father; the domineering, indiscreet
mother; the cousin, Rose Agnew, and her parson husband;
little Kate and Robin of the Royalist household as
well as John Milton and his father, and the two nephews
to whom the poet was tutor and a hard tutor.
Miss Manning’s delightful humour comes out
in the two pragmatical little boys. But Mary
herself dominates the picture. She is so much
a thing of the country, of gardens and fields, that
perforce one is reminded of Sir Thomas Overbury’s
Fair and Happy Milkmaid:
“She doth all things with so
sweet a grace it seems ignorance will not suffer her
to do ill, being her mind is to do well. . . .
The garden and bee-hive are all her physic and chirugery,
and she lives the longer for it. She dares go
alone and unfold sheep in the night and fears no manner
of ill because she means none: yet to say truth
she is never alone, for she is still accompanied by
old songs, honest thoughts and prayers, but short
ones. . . . Thus lives she, and all her care
is that she may die in the spring-time, to have store
of flowers stuck upon her winding-sheet.”
The last remnants of Forest Hill, Mary Powells home, were pulled down in
1854. A visitor to it three years before its demolition tells us:
“Still the rose, the sweet-brier
and the eglantine are reddest beneath its casements;
the cock at its barn-door may be seen from any of the
windows. . . . In the kitchen, with its vast
hearth and overhanging chimney, we discovered tokens
of the good living for which the old manor-house was
famous in its day. . . . The garden, in its massive
wall, ornamental gateway and old sun-dial, retains
some traces of its manorial dignities.”
The house indeed is gone, but the sweet country remains,
the verdant slopes and the lanes with their hedges
full of sweet-brier that stretch out towards Oxford.
And there is the church in which Mary Powell prayed.
I should have liked to quote another of Miss Manning’s
biographers, the Rev. Dr. Hutton, who tells us of old
walls partly built into the farmhouse that now stands
there, and of the old walnut trees in the farmyard,
and in a field hard by the spring of which John Milton
may have tasted, and the church on the hill, and the
distant Chilterns.
Milton’s cottage at Chalfont
St. Giles’s is happily still in a good state
of preservation, although Chalfont and its neighbourhood
have suffered a sea-change even since Dr. Hutton wrote,
a decade ago. All that quiet corner of the world,
for so long green and secluded, a “deare
secret greennesse” has now had the
light of the world let in upon it. Motor-cars
whizz through that Quaker country; money-making Londoners
hurry away from it of mornings, trudge home of evenings,
bag in hand; the jerry-builder is in the land, and
the dust of much traffic lies upon the rose and eglantine
wherewith Milton’s eyes were delighted.
The works of our hands often mock us by their durability.
Years and ages and centuries after the busy brain and
the feeling heart are dust, the houses built with
hands stand up to taunt our mortality. Yet the
works of the mind remain. Though Forest Hill
be only a party-wall, and Chalfont a suburb of London,
the Forest Hill of Mary Powell, the Chalfont of Milton,
yet live for us in Anne Manning’s delightful
pages.
Miss Manning did not wish her Life
to be written, but we do get some glimpses of her
real self from herself in a chance page here and there
of her reminiscences.
Here is one such glimpse:
“I must confess I have never
been able to write comfortably when music was going
on. I think I have always written to most purpose
coming in fresh from a morning walk when the larks
were singing and lambs bleating and distant cocks
in farmyards crowing, and a distant dog barking to
an echo which answered his voice, and when the hedges
and banks were full of wild flowers with quaint and
pretty names.
“Next to that, I have found
the best time soon after early tea, when my companions
were all in the garden, and likely to remain there
till moonlight.”
Not very much by way of a literary
portrait, and yet one can fill it in for oneself,
can place her in old-world Reigate, fast, alas! becoming
over-built and over-populated like all the rest of
the country over which falls the ever-lengthening
London shadow. As one ponders upon Forest Hill
for Mary Powell’s sake is not Shotover
as dear a name as Shottery? and Chalfont
for Milton’s sake, one thinks on Reigate surrounded
by its hills for Anne Manning’s sake, and keeps
the place in one’s heart.
Mary Powell, with its sequel,
Deborah’s Diary Deborah was
the young thing whom to bring into the world Mary
Powell died is one of the most fragrant
books in English literature. One thinks of it
side by side with John Evelyn’s Mrs. Godolphin.
Miss Manning had a beautiful style a style
given to her to reconstruct an idyll of old-world
sweetness. Limpid as flowing water, with a thought
of syllabubs and new-made hay in it, it is a perpetual
delight. This mid-Victorian, dark-haired lady,
with the aquiline nose and high colour, although she
may not have looked it, possessed a charming style,
in which tenderness, seriousness, gaiety, humour, poetry,
appear in the happiest atmosphere of sweetness and
light.
KATHARINE TYNAN.
April 1908