Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface: Tributes to Catherine Innes-Parker
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Speaking of Past and Present: Giving Voice to Silence
- PART I The Wooing Group: Silence And Articulation
- PART II Devotional Texts and their Intertexts
- PART III Hearing and Speaking: Uncovering the Female Reader
- PART IV Manuscripts Speaking Across Borders
- Envoi: ‘þis seli stilðe’: Silence and Stillness in the Anchorhold: Lessons for the Modern World?
- Bibliography of the Writings of Catherine Innes-Parker
- Index
- Tabula in Memoriam
5 - Speaking Beyond the Anchorhold in Richard Rolle's Form of Living
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface: Tributes to Catherine Innes-Parker
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Speaking of Past and Present: Giving Voice to Silence
- PART I The Wooing Group: Silence And Articulation
- PART II Devotional Texts and their Intertexts
- PART III Hearing and Speaking: Uncovering the Female Reader
- PART IV Manuscripts Speaking Across Borders
- Envoi: ‘þis seli stilðe’: Silence and Stillness in the Anchorhold: Lessons for the Modern World?
- Bibliography of the Writings of Catherine Innes-Parker
- Index
- Tabula in Memoriam
Summary
The Office of Saint Richard of Hampole, written in support of Richard Rolle's canonization in the 1380s, clearly includes his ministry to women as a central part, prominently incorporating the story of Margaret of Kirkby, the enclosed woman for and to whom Rolle writes The Form of Living. In the story, Margaret has a devastating seizure and Rolle comes to minister to her because he had long admired and loved her. When he arrives, she comes out of her seizure and falls asleep, leaning on him through the window of the anchorhold. But then she has another seizure before her complete restoration:
He came and found her mute, but when he had seated himself at her window and they had eaten together, it chanced that at the end of the dinner the recluse wished to sleep, and oppressed by slumber her head drooped towards the window where God's saint, Richard, was reclining, and as she was leaning a little on that same Richard, suddenly, with a vehement onslaught, such a grave vexation took her in her sleep that she seemed to wish to break the window of her house.
Rolle prophetically promises her that she will have no more seizures while he is alive, which the office recounts was true, but Margaret has another seizure upon his death. Rosamund Allen suggests that Margaret herself provided these details (she lives much longer than Rolle and is alive when his office is written). She writes ‘the tone of Margaret's report of Rolle's promise to her is serene, reflecting a deep and fruitful friendship. Richard Rolle was a man who inspired deep affection in those who knew him, and a loyal following of friends, particularly from the peasant class, after his death.’ This extensive moment in the Office personalizes both Rolle and Margaret, to whom more than one of Rolle's vernacular works is addressed. The image of the window, too, serves as a metaphor for the kind of reach that Rolle had into the anchorhold – he is outside of it but inside, looking through, supporting.
I think of Catherine Innes-Parker this way too. Throughout my academic career she was a supporting figure – someone I could lean on, lean towards. She was a professional support (letters of recommendation, tenure advice) and personal (we had many long discussions about academic motherhood).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Women and Devotional Literature in the Middle AgesGiving Voice to Silence. Essays in Honour of Catherine Innes-Parker, pp. 98 - 114Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023