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The Orchard of Syon: An Introduction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 July 2016

Sister Mary Denise*
Affiliation:
College Misericordia, Dallas, Pennsylvania

Extract

By some inexplicable accident of literary history, The Orchard of Syon, in the nearly five hundred years of its existence, has not found its critical editor, nor is there any study of it available to readers. The first to rescue it from oblivion was Sir Richard Sutton, steward of Syon Monastery in the early sixteenth century, who, as Wynkyn de Worde informs us, found it ‘in a corner by it selfe’ and deemed it worthy of costly publication. Although it belongs to a body of medieval literature which has been in recent years the object of much critical research by medievalists, the work has, so far as modern readers are concerned, continued for over four centuries to lie ‘in a corner by it selfe.’ The energetic surge of vernacular devotional prose in the fourteenth century, not only in England, but in Italy, Germany, and Flanders — countries whose spiritual climate must have been especially favorable to mysticism — did not recede in the fifteenth century. Following upon the age of Chaucer, this century may seem to some present-day scholars literarily poor and unproductive, but it was a great age of English prose; an age, that is, when translations and experiments with original prose in the vernacular were building on the past, borrowing from other languages to meet the needs of the present, and shaping the prose of the future. The Orchard of Syon is an important specimen of this emerging prose, as well as of current devotional literature. Its connection with Syon Monastery, renowned in the history of England and of the Church, gives it added prestige.

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Copyright
Copyright © Fordham University Press 

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References

1 The work apparently received this title when it was printed by Wynkyn de Worde in 1519. The only manuscript bearing a title is the Cambridge MS (St. John's College Library 98) and this title is The Life and Revelations of St. Katharina in large, awkward capitals of a much later date than the handwriting of the text. The suggestion for the title, however, comes directly from the translator in his Prologue: ‘ϸis boke of reuelaciones as for 3oure gostli confort to 3ou I clepe it a froitful orchard.’ Google Scholar

2 St. Catharine called it simply ‘Il Libro.’ Traditio Google Scholar

3 Libro de la divina providentia composto in volgare de la seraphica vergine Chaterina da Siena (Bologna c.1475). I am indebted to the authorities at the Pierpont Morgan Library for permission to consult this First Edition.Google Scholar

4 Gardner, E. G., ‘Catherine of Siena,’. The Catholic Encyclopedia (New York 1908) 3.448.Google Scholar

5 ‘Whoever the maidens were for whom the [Ancrene] Riwle was written, they were the cause of great things in English prose. They were the first known to us of a long list of devoted women, for whose consolation so many of the greatest books of Middle English prose were composed.’ Chambers, R. W., On the Continuity of English Prose from Alfred to More and His School (EETS, o.s.186; London 1932) c.Google Scholar

6 According to the Short Title Catalog there is one copy each in the British Museum, the Cambridge Univ. and the Bodleian Libraries, and in the collection of Harmsworth, Sir R. L. Bishop, W. W. has located copies in the Folger Shakespeare Library and in the New York Public Library. A Checklist of American Copies of STC Books (2nd ed. University of Michigan 1950). Mr. Doyle, A. I. of the University Library, Durham, England, informs me in a letter that Longleat House (the Marquess of Bath) has a copy, on vellum with illuminated borders, including the arms of the Passion, in a red velvet binding, and that Sion College in London also has a copy on paper in a contemporary blind-stamped binding.Google Scholar

7 A Catalogue of the Harleian Manuscripts in the British Museum (London 1808) III 25. The Orchard of SyonGoogle Scholar

8 Montague Rhodes James, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Manuscripts in the Library of St. Johns College, Cambridge (Cambridge 1913) 102. Google Scholar

9 This refers to the ‘Kalender’ which precedes the text. Google Scholar

10 Catalogue of Manuscripts and Early Printed Books from the Libraries of William Morris, Richard Bennett, Bertram, Fourth Earl of Ashburnham, and Other Sources, Now Forming Portion of the Library of J. Pierpont Morgan (London 1906) No. 98.Google Scholar

11 If this is the bibliographer and antiquarian who authored works on early English printing and was notorious for tearing title pages from rare books (DNB s.v.), either there is an error in the date given for his death (1759) or, possibly, the manuscript was not purchased by him but was added as an accession to the collection which he left. Google Scholar

12 This study has no conclusive evidence that any of the three manuscripts was the printer's copy. Google Scholar

13 Mr. Doyle, A. I., who has been at work on the Rylands MS lat. 395. calls my attention to the fact that this manuscript has a passage on fol. 90b entitled De revelacione Katerine de Senis, ij parte, capitulo iij. This short passage of 122 words, in Middle English, is a direct quotation from Part I, chapter xii, in the Morgan MS. The same correspondent also mentioned that the extract in Oxford Univ. Coll. MS 14, fols. 58a-59a, comes from the Dialogo, chap. 106, tract III, and Part V, chap. ii of The Orchard. Finally, in Harl. MS 2409 the third of five items is entitled ‘How ϸe holy mayden Kateryne of Seen first began to sette hyr hert fully to Godwarde.’ It occupies only five leaves. Miss Hope Emily Allen says that it is concerned with the revelations of St. Catharine. Writings Ascribed to Richard Rolle, Hermit of Hampole (Oxford 1931) 343 n. It is altogether likely that there are other numerous instances of excerpts translated from the Italian or Latin versions of the Revelations and existing in Middle English manuscripts.Google Scholar

14 Plomer, H. R., Wynkyn de Worde and His Contemporaries (London 1925) 83.Google Scholar

15 With William Smyth, Bishop of Lincoln, Sir Richard Sutton was the co-founder of Brasenose College, Oxford. In 1513 he became steward of Syon Monastery, a valuable preferment. In this capacity he displayed his love for literature by bearing the expense of the publication of The Orchard of Syon, ‘a most superb and curious specimen of ancient English typography.’ DNB s.v. For a detailed biography, see Ralph Churton, The Lives of William Smyth, Bishop of Lincoln and Sir Richard Sutton, Knight, Founders of Brasen Nose College (Oxford 1800). Google Scholar

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17 Notes on the provenance of this copy prove that it was the very one which Ralph Churton, on the report of ‘Mr. Warton,’ described in 1800. Lives of Smyth and Sutton 417. I wish here to express my thanks to Mr. Karl Kup, curator of the Spencer Collection in the New York Public Library, for allowing me the use of this rare book; and also to Miss Elisabeth Roth for her courtesy on several occasions. Google Scholar

18 Churton believed that this cut represented St. Catharine. Google Scholar

19 Plomer reports that ‘the outstanding feature of de Worde's work was his love for pictures’ and that he seldom let a book go without one, whether it was suitable to the text or not. Wynkyn de Worde, 61. In his edition of Ames’ Typographical Antiquities (London 1812) II 243, the Rev. Dibdin, Thomas F. describes them as ‘well-printed, but in regard to composition, nearly as rude as can be imagined, with the exception of that which represents the faithful portrait of St. Katherine.’Google Scholar

20 Wynkyn de Worde 83. In another part of the same work, Plomer writes: ‘All that can be said of Wynkyn de Worde as a printer is that, when he liked, he could turn out good work. He possessed some well-cut and well-cast founts of Black Letter of all sizes, and towards the end of his life several founts of roman and italic. His “blacks” are seen to the best advantage in such folios as The Golden Legend, The Chronicles of England, and The Orchard of Syon.’ Op. cit. 101.Google Scholar

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25 This religious was already professed in August, 1518, and died January 5, 1540. At the Suppression she was granted eight pounds per annum as a pension, but she is not in any other pension list. The Stricklands were seated at Sizberg Castle, Westmoreland, since the time of Edward III. [For this information I am indebted to Sister Mary Dominic, O. SS. S., of the present Syon community, who copied it from the work of the late Canon Fletcher, which gives the history of Syon and the ‘Who's Who’ of the benefactors and members of the community. This unpublished work is in the library at Syon Abbey, South Brent, Devon.] It is probable that Sister Elizabeth was a descendant of William Strickland (d. 1419), whose descendants have the same arms as the Sizberg family. DNB s.v. Google Scholar

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27 Was he the Lionel Tolomach, third bart. of Helmingham (d. 1668), Suffolk? His son, Lionel, was born in 1649. Another son, Thomas, distinguished himself in the British army and died of wounds June 12, 1694. The portrait of this Tolomach is in the collection of Lord Dysart of Ham House. DNB s.v. It was in this house that the copy of The Orchard of Syon which is now in New York had its former home. Google Scholar

28 Subsequent references to this MS will be to Morgan. Google Scholar

29 The full title of this convent, founded in 1415 by King Henry V, is ‘The Monastery of St. Saviour, St. Mary the Virgin and St. Bridget of Syon.’ A branch of the Bridgettines, founded at Vadstena around 1373 by St. Bridget of Sweden, it included brothers as well as sisters, over whom an abbess ruled in all matters temporal. A Confessor-General cared for the spiritual needs of both communities. The monks have long since died out, but the nuns, after the Suppression by Henry VIII, had an adventurous career on the Continent, and in the late nineteenth century their direct descendants were able to make a successful refoundation on British soil. They are at present located in South Brent, Devon. Google Scholar

30 It is related that the Saviour dictated the Rule to St. Bridget. Google Scholar

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33 A manuscript which Gigli, who edited the saint's works in 1707, believed to be by one of her secretaries, and which seems at least contemporary with them, runs on continuously, with the division into chapters noted in the margin. Drane, Augusta T., The History of St. Catherine of Siena (London 1899) II 122. This is the order of the Morgan MS.Google Scholar

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47 Born in the same year as St. Catharine, he was a Sienese nobleman who became an enthusiastic caterinato c. 1376. For a time he was the chief of the saint's secretaries. Gardner 169. Google Scholar

48 A vernacular poet and by rank a nobleman of one of the lesser Sienese houses, ‘he is the first of a little group of youths of birth and learning who left their families to cleave to her [St. Catharine] and serve her as her secretaries.’ Gardner 85. Google Scholar

49 Hurtand, R. J. P., O.P., trans., Le Dialogue de Sainte Catherine de Sienne, traduction nouvelle de l'italien (19e édit. Paris 1913) I xxxv.Google Scholar

50 Libellus de supplemento legendae prolixae virginis beatae Catharinae de Senis by Fra Tommaso Caffarini. Biblioteca comunale di Siena, MS T.i.2; Biblioteca Casanatense (Rome) MS 2360. Unpub. Quoted by Drane, op. cit. II 121.Google Scholar

51 Michael de la Bedoyère, The Greatest Catherine: The Life of Catherine Benincasa, Saint of Siena (Milwaukee 1947) 197. Google Scholar

52 La Spiritualité chrétienne II (Paris 1924) 314 n.1.Google Scholar

53 Legenda major, AS April III 949.Google Scholar

54 Ibid. 945.Google Scholar

55 Cited by Gillet, Martin S., La mission de sainte Catherine de Sienne (Paris 1948) 92.Google Scholar

56 Processus contestationum super sanctitatem et doctrinam Catharinae de Senis, ed. only in part by Martène and Durand in the sixth vol. of their Amplissima collectio (Paris 1729). Cited by Gillet 254.Google Scholar

57 Saint Catharine of Siena 354.Google Scholar

58 History of St. Catherine of Siena II 120.Google Scholar

59 Cited by Gillet 254; Drane 120 n. 1. Google Scholar

60 ‘It was in Avignon that Catherine collected material for the terrible chapters in the Dialogue about the sinful lives of the clergy, and her … description … of the “bad servants of God” is based on memories of the papal court.’ Johannes Jorgensen, St. Catherine of Siena, trans. Ingeborg Lund (London and New York 1938) 230. Google Scholar

61 Underhill, Evelyn, The Mystics of the Church (New York 1926) 160.Google Scholar

62 Pourrat finds Raymund's statement that Catherine dictated during ecstasy ‘extraordinaire, puisque l'extatique ne peut ni parler ni se mouvoir pendant l'extase.’ Op. cit. 314. Google Scholar

63 Gardner adopts this arrangement as a compromise between that of the manuscripts and early editions of the Italian texts and that given by Fra Raymund in his Latin version. Op. cit. 354 n. Google Scholar

64 The Dialogue of the Seraphic Virgin, St. Catherine of Siena, trans. by Algar Thorold (London 1896) 19. Further citations from this translation will be to The Dialogue.Google Scholar

65 Lettere V No. 272.Google Scholar

66 The Dialogue 20.Google Scholar

67 Ibid. 32. 68 Ibid. 38.Google Scholar

69 The figure is introduced in chapter xxi. Google Scholar

70 Ibid. 66ff. 71 Ibid. 163.Google Scholar

72 Cf. Tanquerey, A., The Spiritual Life: A Treatise on Ascetical and Mystical Theology, trans. Herman Branderis (Tournai, Belgium 1930) Part II.Google Scholar

73 Sermo in Cantica Canticorum 1.1 (PL 183. 795).Google Scholar

74 The Dialogue 356.Google Scholar

75 Ibid. 360.Google Scholar

76 Pourrat, P., op. cit. 314.Google Scholar

77 Dicendum quod incipientes, proficientes et perfecti, secundum quod per hoc status diversi distinguuntur, dicuntur homines non secundum quodcumque studium, sed secundum studium eorum quae pertinent ad spiritualem libertatem vel servitutem.Thomas, S. de Aquino, Summae Theologiae 11–11 q. 183 art. 4 ad 2.Google Scholar

78 Noted by Pourrat 318. 79 Gillet, , op. cit. 94.Google Scholar

80 Lettere IV No. 272. 81 The Dialogue 253.Google Scholar

82 Op. cit. 1. 83 Ibid. 356.Google Scholar

84 Gardner is also the author of Dante (New York 1932), Dante and the Mystics (London 1913), and other studies of the Italian poet. Google Scholar

85 Cited by Jorgensen, op. cit. 35. Google Scholar

86 Gardner, , St. Catharine 367.Google Scholar

87 Jorgensen, 301. Google Scholar

88 Purg. 17. 91–93.Google Scholar

89 Cap. 146 Morgan MS 162 [Chapters 137–156 are not included in Thorold's English version]. Google Scholar

90 The Dialogue 114.Google Scholar

91 P. 326. Google Scholar

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94 Lettere V No. 373.Google Scholar

95 Libro de la divina providentia composto in volgare de la seraphica vergine Chaterina da Siena (Bologna c. 1475). El libro de la divina doctrina revellata a quella gloriosa et sanctissima vergine sancta Caterina da Siena (Naples 1478). Dialogo de la seraphica virgine sancta Catherina de la divina providentia (Venice 1494). [These titles and facts of publication are supplied by Gardner, E. G. in his Saint Catherine of Siena 424–35. Gardner gives 1472 as the date of the Bologna edition. The catalogue of the bookseller from whom the Morgan Library purchased its copy of this edition gives the date as 1475.]Google Scholar

96 Dialogus Seraphice ac dive Catharine de Senis cum nonnullis aliis orationibus, translated by Raimundus de Vineis (Brescia 1496). Through the courtesy of the Pierpont Morgan Library staff, I was able to consult this First Edition and to quote from it.Google Scholar

97 Another of Catharine's fellowship, he also wrote a life of Giovanni Columbini and had an Italian version of the Revelations of St. Bridget copied for the Confraternity of Our Lady. Gardner 89–90. Google Scholar

98 The tradition goes back at least as far as the eighth century, when Benedict Biscop, on his numerous journeys to the Continent, returned with manuscripts for the libraries at Wearmouth and Jarrow. These were the treasures which enriched the scholarship of St. Bede. Google Scholar

99 Catalogue of the Library of Syon Monastery. Isleworthy ed. Mary Bateson (Cambridge 1898). Mr. Doyle, A. I. has reexamined the Catalogue under violet ray and is planning a supplementary volume to Miss Bateson's edition.Google Scholar

100 Harl. MS 3432 fol. 192a. Google Scholar

101 Johanna Sewell, a nun of Syon, inscribed her monogram on a copy of Richard Rolle's Incendium Amoris. With this monogram is that of the Carthusian James Greenhalgh of Sheen, who seems to have been Johanna's friend and, perhaps, her tutor in the writings of Rolle. Greenhalgh had given this sister a copy of the black-letter Scale of Perfection, which likewise shows the two monograms. The Incendium Amoris of Richard Rolle of Hampole, ed. Margaret Deanesly (Manchester 1915) 79–83. Google Scholar

102 Churton, R., Lives of Smith and Sutton 412.Google Scholar

103 Morgan MS fol. 1a. I wish to express my sincere appreciation to the Director of the Pierpont Morgan Library for granting me permission to quote from this manuscript. Google Scholar

104 Ibid. The context would seem to require ‘hole’ instead of ‘holi,’ but the scribe has distinctly written the latter word.Google Scholar

105 fol. 7b. Google Scholar