Tuesday 22 August 2023

A blue plaque for John Cleveland?

While I'd heard of the Reverend James Bickham, Rector of Loughborough, and his library which he left for future generations of Loughborough clergy, I didn't get involved in a project to make his books more well-known and accessible until November 2022, and that is also when I met Ursula. The Manuscripts and Special Collections at the University of Nottingham hold quite a few collections that are relevant to Loughborough, Bickham's Library being one of them, and Ursula is keen to promote these. In her guest post, Ursula tells us about the metaphysical poet from Loughborough, John Cleveland.                     

A Blue Plaque for John Cleveland?

 by Ursula Ackrill

 Librarian at Manuscripts and Special Collections, University of Nottingham

Engraving of John Cleveland based on a portrait by Isaac Fuller
Engraving by James Basire (1730–1802) after a portrait by Isaac Fuller (1606-1672), published 1781. © National Portrait Gallery, London

Loughborough was the birthplace of the poet and Royalist John Cleveland (1613–1658). According to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography he “was baptized on 20 June 1613 at Loughborough, the son of Thomas Cleveland (d. 1652) and Elizabeth Hebbe (d. 1649). He was the second of their eleven children, not all of whom survived, and their eldest son. Thomas Cleveland was then assistant to the rector of the parish church as well as usher at Burton's Grammar School.”

For the first seven years of his life John Cleveland lived in Loughborough. He attended the Grammar School where his father was usher. His early memories would have been of All Saints Church and the Old Rectory, where his father assisted the Rector John Browne, and he would have minded his Ps and Qs for headmasters Mr Spong and Mr Woodmansey, to whom his father reported as usher.

Right next to the church stood the manor house of Loughborough, owned by the Hastings family [now an Italian restaurant]. They possessed a large portion of the town until Henry Hastings, younger brother of Ferdinando Hastings, Earl of Huntingdon, threw his fate in with the Royalists and ended up losing the family seat: Ashby-de-la-Zouch Castle. The castle was rendered uninhabitable by the Parliamentarians in 1648 and the family forced to sell land to recover its war debts. All this upheaval lay in a distant future as the child John Cleveland ran his first errands in the triangle between church, manor house and rectory. When the Earl and his Lady passed through town bellringers announced his coming and the town offered hospitality, pouring out wine and beer for the Earl’s gentlemen and followers (White 1969, p.79). Children would have banged about amid the peals of the bells to make the cortege halt on the road.

In 1621 the Cleveland family moved to Hinckley, where John attended Hinckley Grammar School for the next six years. On 4 September 1627 he was then admitted to Christ's College, Cambridge. Cleveland spent a long and productive stint at Cambridge; critics presume that his love poetry (more on that later) was written in College. He left Cambridge under pressure in June 1642, just before the outbreak of the Civil War in August that year; the town supported the Parliamentarian side. He joined the King at his headquarters, established at Oxford in November 1642. There Cleveland wrote The Rebell Scot, his most famous poem, and part of a larger body of satirical works in which political enemies are skewered with wit and “critical intelligence”, “hauteur” and “bitterness” (Cousins, 1981, p.61). Cleveland’s poetry lives in the tradition of metaphysical poetry established under the influence of John Donne (1572-1631).

What is metaphysical poetry, you ask? It aims to reflect on experience truthfully in figures of speech that no other poets have used before and prefers to do this with paradoxes, bringing - or even forcing - together opposing concepts into startling, mind-stretching formulations. Cleveland found fertile ground for his poetry in imbalances of power, and it is because of his use of inequalities that his readers should be made aware that Cleveland’s poetry is due content warnings. [1]

There are instances where the lyrical subject speaks from a place of powerlessness, artfully self-erasing their power to uplift the power of the addressee, by contrast, to towering heights. In The Hecatomb to his Mistresse the subject plays the tongue-tied poet putting into verse his inability to express how great his mistress is, calling the very idea of praising her “sacrilege” as her femininity baffles poets as much as tropical infections confound medics. Physicians, Cleveland tells us, cannot cure quartans, a recurring malarial fever. But Cleveland argues all this in verses which prove the opposite as we read through them. We read accomplished poetry in print [2]:

“Say the Astrologer, who spells the Stars,

In that fair Alphabet reads Peace and Wars,

Mistakes his Globe, and in her brighter eye

Interprets Heavens physiognomy.

Call her the Metaphysics of her Sex,

And say she tortures wits, as Quartans vex

Physitians; call her the Square Circle, say

She is the very rule of Algebra.

What ere thou understand’st not, say’t of her,

For that’s the way to write her Character.

Say this and more, and when thou hop’st to raise

Thy fansie so as to inclose her praise,

Alas poor Gotham with thy Cookko hedge,

Hyperboles are here but sacriledge.”

It is worth noting that the south Notts village of Gotham lies only some 8 miles away from Loughborough and Cleveland may have heard the stories about the mad men of Gotham as a child. The first printing that introduced The Merry Tales of the Mad Men of Gotham to a wider audience, dates from 1630, when Cleveland was at Cambridge. [3]

Having seen the conceit of speaking praise to “power” only to empower the subject by stealth, we ought to look at one of Cleveland’s poems that needs to be tagged with content warnings for misogyny and ageism: A young Man to an old Woman Courting him. The poem is a variation on a theme that was popular in northern European art and literature during the 16th and 17th centuries: the ill-matched couple. The term comprises both the coupling of old men with young women or old women with young men. To begin with, in the 16th century, painters used caricature and stereotypical conventions to make people laugh and to caution against such mismatches. A convention is for instance an inane smile painted on the older partner’s face, revealing their predatory assuredness together with missing teeth. Conventional in the depiction of the younger partner is a glazed, dead-eyed expression, whilst hands are grasping coins. Today’s workplaces call it “quiet quitting”. [4]

Painting featuring a man with a smiling older woman
Painting by Lucas Cranach the Elder (Budapest Museum of Fine Arts): Ill-Matched Couple: Young Man and Old Woman between 1520 and 1522. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

However, in the 17th century we see painters’ attempts to humanise the genre by bringing nuance to set pieces: in de Cordua’s painting [below] the old woman is shown holding the money purse firmly shut, whilst the young man’s bright white hand is used to highlight her face. She looks wise and more heedful rather than foolish.

Painting of a man with an older woman
Painting by Johann de Cordua (Museum: Bavarian State Painting Collections): The ill-matched couple, 1676. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

The genre evolved. The painting by Simon Vouet uses the conventions of the ill-matched couple-genre to tell a story of connection despite the ill match, the old man and the young woman looking equally vulnerable in the presence of the skull, which sits on their table.

Painting of an older man with a younger woman
Painting by Simon Vouet (Museum: National Museum in Warsaw): Ill matched (Couple mal assorti), c.1621. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Were it not for the superfine scarf surrounding the woman’s outline like a band of gold - and which the man’s right-hand ring finger touches intently, - we might not place this painting inside the genre. The painter has created a window of possibility in which whatever goes on is actually alright. The effect is the exact opposite to what earlier ill-matched couples-images wanted us viewers to think. Unsurprisingly, should you search for paintings of an equivalent “alright” match with a woman as the older partner, none such seem to exist. Post a Comment if you know better …

Cleveland’s poem ridicules the belief that an old woman can be desirable. At the beginning of the poem stands the young man’s refusal:

“Peace Beldam Eve: surcrease thy suit,

There’s no temptation in such fruit.”

However, the poem is more than a suite of rejections morphing from stereotype to original invention and back again; it is Cleveland’s virtuoso show of talent. The ill-matched coupling is a vehicle for working with contrasts, challenging himself to outdo all previous attempts by coining new similes, such as:

“I love to weare cloathes that are flush,

Not prefacing old rags with plush:

Like Aldermen, or Monster Shreeves,

With Canvas Backs and Velvet Sleeves.

And just such discord there would be

Betwixt thy Skeleton and me.”

Cleveland draws on his knowledge of the classics he studied at Cambridge, when he writes:

“If my affection thou would’st win,

First cast thy Hieroglyphick skin.

My modern lips know not (alack)

The old Religion of thy smack.

I count that primitive embrace,

As out of fashion as thy face.

And yet so long ‘tis since thy fall,

Thy Fornication’s Classicall.”

Cleveland’s ambition to contrast and counterbalance went as far as the creation of another poem titled On an Alderman who married a very young wife, which nevertheless remained unpublished. It is overall a weaker poem and much cruder in its humour. The topic does not seem to have exerted the same hold on Cleveland’s imagination. Ideally, we would like to know what Cleveland would make of a real person who lived both scenarios in succession, such as Margarete Cranmer, second wife of the reformation Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer.

Cranmer met his wife in 1532 when he was aged 43. We do not know her age, but we can assume she would have been a lot younger than Cranmer. As a widow 32 years later, in 1564, Margarete married Bartholomew Scott, a friend of her son-in-law, and therefore presumably some 15-20 years her junior.  According to the Dictionary of National Biography quoted in Wikipedia “Scott had won Margaret, it was alleged, by flattery and expressions of deepest sympathy, but after marriage he dissembled no more. The marriage was without love, comfort, or mutuality”. In her youth and up until she married Cranmer, Margarete had lived under the care of her aunt in the house of the German theologian and reformer Andreas Osiander in Nuremberg. She would have been surrounded by newly printed protestant literature and art prints must have laid around in heaps. She may even have laughed at the popular cautionary ill-matched couples’ prints, back then. It would be interesting to know whether the idea of someone like Margarete entertained Cleveland’s imagination.

During the Civil War Cleveland stood by his King and returned to the East Midlands on this duty. He served as judge advocate with the royal garrison at Newark from spring 1645 to spring the following year. Cleveland was in the presence of the King at least twice, according to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. He delivered a speech to the King in March 1642, whilst still at Cambridge, and he certainly would have seen the King at Newark in November 1645. Newark was besieged by the Scots in that month and the King left in secrecy shortly before the siege was laid. It was Cleveland who wrote in refusal of a demand for the city's surrender.

However, on 5 May 1646 the King surrendered himself to the Scots at Southwell, not far from Newark. The interim days spent by the King in a state of limbo, straying in disguise, expecting capture, preyed on Cleveland’s mind. He wrote a disquieting poem about this, The King’s Disguise, pre-empting the loss of identity and foothold in the world that he himself was to experience in the aftermath of the war. Cleveland remained unreconciled with the shift in government, unable to justify or even admit the Parliamentarian cause. He survived on the charity and goodwill of friends and died in London of an intermittent fever on 29 April 1658. As far as surviving records go, he never returned to Loughborough.

Engraved book frontispiece showing a man reading in his stidy
Frontispiece of the book Eikōn basilikē : the pourtraicture of His Sacred Majestie in his solitudes and sufferings: together with his private prayers used in the time of his restraint, and delivered to Dr. Juxon, Bishop of London, immediately before his death

The book in the photograph above is a purported spiritual autobiography attributed to King Charles I of England. It was published on 9 February 1649, ten days after the King was beheaded by Parliament. The heavily allegorical frontispiece of the Eikōn basilikē depicts the King as a Christian martyr, an image Cleveland would have found entirely relatable. This particular print is from the copy of Eikōn basilikē which belonged to Rev. James Bickham, curator of the Loughborough Parish Library. Rev. Bickham lived in the Old Rectory between 1761-1785. His library is kept at Manuscripts and Special Collections, University of Nottingham. [5]

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NOTES

[1] Issuing a content warning has become de rigueur in the world of metadata: it’s simply a way of alerting potential readers/watchers/listeners that what they are about to consume contains topics, ideas, and beliefs that are no longer popular, and as such, may cause offence, or be upsetting. Of course, at the time the resource was created this would not have been the case.

[2] Full text of the poem is available.

[3] Mad Men of Gotham – rest assured the men of Gotham were most certainly not mad, but rather feigned madness in order to deter King John from building a hunting lodge in their village, which would deprive the villagers of valuable land. See https://www.historic-uk.com/CultureUK/Wise-Men-of-Gotham/

[4] Quiet quitting as applied to the working environment means putting in the minimum amount of effort to retain a job, but not going any extra mile for an employer, so perhaps not speaking up in meetings, not volunteering for some tasks, and refusing to work overtime.

[5] You can find more information about the Reverend James Bickham in several posts on this blog:

Who Was Reverend Bickham

Reverend James Bickham’s Library 

Letters to, from, and related to Loughborough 

Reverend James Bickham’s home 

A short account of John Cleveland also appears in 'A-Z of Loughborough'

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Sources

Brian Morris and Eleanor Withington (eds.), The poems of John Cleveland (1967)

A.D. Cousins: The Cavalier World and John Cleveland, in Studies in philology, 1981, Vol.78 (1), p.61-86

Alfred White, A history of Loughborough endowed schools (1969)

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: in association with the British Academy. Oxford: OUP, 2004. 9780198614111 [Set]

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About Ursula

As a librarian at Nottingham University with Manuscripts and Special Collections, Ursula has developed a wide range of skills that enable her to promote and interrogate unique collections of material, sharing them widely with people who are interested. Ursula has recently joined the Loughborough Archaeological and Historical Society, and can be found at the Old Rectory on some Saturdays during the opening season of the museum. Ursula also gives talks and presentations to groups about her work, for example on 27th February 2024, Ursula will talk about Parish Libraries at St Helen's Heritage Centre, Ashby.    

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Posted by lynneaboutloughborough

With apologies for typos which are all mine!

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