Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Sensational Invasions: The Jesuit, the State and the Family
- 2 Nuns and Priests: Sensations of the Cloister
- 3 Persecution and Martyrdom: The Law and the Body
- 4 Feeling the Great Change: Conversion and the Authority of Affect
- 5 Art Catholicism and the New Catholic Baroque
- Epilogue
- Works Cited
- Index
5 - Art Catholicism and the New Catholic Baroque
The Poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins and Francis Thompson
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Sensational Invasions: The Jesuit, the State and the Family
- 2 Nuns and Priests: Sensations of the Cloister
- 3 Persecution and Martyrdom: The Law and the Body
- 4 Feeling the Great Change: Conversion and the Authority of Affect
- 5 Art Catholicism and the New Catholic Baroque
- Epilogue
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Is there not some mystic and magnificent ceremony wh is performed by the deluded votaries of your unhappy creed on the eve of Easter Sunday that is Easter Saturday –? My Mamma is very desirous of witnessing the horrid rite, and has commissioned me to find out where it is best enacted.
— William Makepeace Thackeray, LettersOf Catholic priests I had a far less distinct idea. I knew only that they had their little suburban chapels, in which they perpetrated ineff able rites.
— Canon Frederick OakeleyBetter far to flutter like a moth round the candles of a gay Benediction, than to live without love in the proprieties of sensual ease and worldly comfort.
— Father Frederick FaberIn the year following his conversion to Catholicism, John Henry Newman reviewed a new volume of religious poetry by John Keble, his friend, former colleague and leader of the Oxford Movement. The essay is a bristly aff air, its literary criticism punctuated by extended passages of self-justification and sharp protestations against those ‘who have spoken or written harshly of recent converts to the Catholic Church’ and who merit ‘more lenient measure’ on the ‘Great Day’ of Judgement than they have seen fit to dole out themselves. In this hypersensitive mood, Newman welcomes the volume's denominational discretion. Unlike Keble's previous collections of religious poems, Lyra Innocentium maintains ‘an emphatic silence on the subject of other Churches’; no Catholic could ‘find fault’ with its depictions of an essential Christianity (422).
Nonetheless, Newman is not above engaging in a bit of denominational one-up-manship. Of course, he praises his old friend's literary contribution to the transformation of the Anglican Church: ‘[h]e did that for the Church of England which none but a poet could do: he made it poetical’ (442). Yet he suggests that this is a poor substitute for the truth and beauty of Catholicism itself:
Poetry is the refuge of those who have not the Catholic Church to flee to and repose upon, for the Church herself is the most sacred and august of poets … She is the poet of her children; full of music to soothe the sad and control the wayward, – wonderful in story for the imagination of the romantic; rich in symbol and imagery, so that gentle and delicate feelings, which will not bear words, may in silence intimate their presence or commune with themselves.
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- Catholic Sensationalism and Victorian Literature , pp. 231 - 283Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2007