Saturday 19 July 2008

 

The latest culture as recommended by our staff

Clemency Burton-Hill
Clemency Burton-Hill

Clemency suggests


Catherine Parr: Henry VIII’s Last Love

Last but not least

Susan James
Tempus, 348pp, £20,
Robert Stewart
Wednesday, 30th April 2008

Robert Stewart reviews Susan James' new book

Catherine, born into the middling gentry, took quickly and energetically to acting the aristocrat at Henry’s lavish court. She became a clothes horse, importing the latest and most expensive fashions in clothing and jewellery from Italy, France and the Netherlands, showing off her prowess at dancing, taking up archery, keeping greyhounds. None of that was exceptional. What was exceptional was her determination to throw herself into state affairs. She strove, successfully, to restore the place of the princess Mary to the line of succession to the throne. She was trusted by Henry to have diplomatic conversations with Imperial ambassadors in the interest of improving Anglo-Imperial relations. And when Henry went warring in France in 1544 he made her Regent-General over a council of regency which discovered that she was not abashed to be a leader of men. Nothing lay outside her scope. Showing judgment, understanding and, most astonishingly, utter self- confidence, she threw herself into the daily task of governing, ordering military supplies (even countermanding an order of the king himself), dealing with military deserters, handling a fishing dispute, investigating episcopal finances.

Susan James does not attempt to disguise that much of the above emerges only from reading between the lines. But she fills the spaces with such exactitude of scholarship that the account is altogether persuasive and that scholarship bears its finest fruit in her treatment of Catherine’s supreme achievement, her work as an author to advance the cause of Christian humanism on behalf of the reformed religion that Henry had introduced to England. She financed the translation of Erasmus’ Paraphrases of the gospels, chose the translators for each book, and, James convincingly argues, probably herself translated the Boke of St Matthew. One edition of Cranmer’s new Litany appeared alongside her translation of Bishop Fisher’s Psalms or Prayers. Her great original work, the Lamentations of a Sinner (1547), was the first work ever published by an English queen and the first in prose to be published by a woman in the 16th century. James salutes it in a subtle, beautifully written chapter as a feminist milestone (she does not herself use the adjective) that displays not only Catherine’s desire to bring the new faith to men and women in the vernacular, but ‘the mind of a queen who no longer saw herself as a woman like other women, but as Diana, half-male, half-female, particular, apart’.

Allying herself so strongly with the party of religious reform brought Catherine into disodour with conservatives. She survived accusations of heresy and plots against her life in 1546, only to die in childbirth in 1548 at the age of 36. Four and a half centuries later Susan James has raised her from the dead.

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