Read World Enough and Time Online
Authors: Nicholas Murray
Whatever his thoughts about his personal prospects, Marvell must have known that a panegyric would be expected of him. From the poem that emerged it seems likely that he needed no external prompting, for it is one of the few from Marvell's hand that contains any expression of direct, personal feeling. It was almost certainly written in the immediate aftermath of Cromwell's death because a volume of tributes, including Marvell's, was entered in the Stationers' Register by the publisher Henry Herringman on 20 January 1659. It was called simply âA Poem upon the Death of O.C.'.
Once again the Cromwell of this poem is represented as the reluctant actor who would have preferred a quiet life but whom âangry Heaven unto War had sway'd'. It recounts, in dignified, moving couplets, the known public events leading up to his death, including the death of his daughter and his love of her and the presaging storm of the night before his death. His victories at Dunbar in 1650 and Worcester in 1651 â both of which shared the date of his death, 3 September â are recalled. Marvell's fatalism has already been noted. It was a complex thing that resulted in a tendency both to defer to the present power (first Cromwell, then Charles II) and to justify apparent shifts in allegiance (though, of course, Marvell became part of the Parliamentary Opposition to Charles, even if he did not challenge his kingship) by arguing that it was not his business to challenge the legitimacy of rulers. Loyalism rather than consistency was his standard of value. Thus, Cromwell is seen once again as an inevitable force, blessed by the stars, and, through the pathetic fallacy, his death marked by the sympathetic natural elements:
O Cromwell, Heavens Favorite!
To none
Have such high honours from above been shown:
For whom the Elements we Mourners see,
And
Heav'n
it self would the great
Herald
be;
This is, of course, a public funeral elegy and a certain excess of praise is demanded by the genre. Copious allusions to classical models such as Virgil's
Georgics
abound and Cromwell is celebrated in terms that suggest that his valour exceeds anything in the Arthurian legends and his piety that of Edward the Confessor. His sanctioning of religious war is approved (âHe first put Armes into
Religions
hand') and his magnanimity is asserted. Towards the end of the poem a more personal note enters (âAll, all is gone of ours or his delight'), suggesting that the poet is writing from personal and intimate knowledge of Cromwell. Not in the remotest sense a confessional poet, Marvell here nonetheless lets his personal emotions show at last:
I saw him dead, a leaden slumber lyes,
And mortal sleep over those wakefull eyes:
Those gentle rays under the lids were fled,
Which through his looks that piercing sweetness shed;
That port which so majestique was and strong,
Loose and depriv'd of vigour, stretch'd along:
All wither'd, all discolour'd, pale and wan.
How much another thing, no more than man?
With just a hint at the controversial status of Cromwell's pre-eminence, the poet predicts that future ages will see him more clearly as an exemplar of courage, âWhen truth shall be allow'd, and faction cease'. He is now in Heaven, leaving behind his mourners âlost in tears'. The poem closes with an allusion to Cromwell's son, Richard, who assumed the Protectorate as if Cromwell had been a hereditary monarch. The reference to Richard's âmilder beams' implies delicately that he will not be able to match his father's authority and power. His absence from the struggle to date is glossed as another example of Cromwellian reserve, waiting in silence until the call of duty comes. When it does, being a Cromwell, he will rise to the occasion: âA Cromwell in an houre a prince will grow.' Richard survived, in fact, little over six months before his government collapsed in April 1659 to be followed by the restored Rump Parliament.
A surviving document in the Public Record Office shows the detailed arrangements that were made for the funeral. It records the amount of mourning cloth allotted to each of the principal mourners:
9 | Â | Mr. | ||||
9 9 | Â | Mr. Merville Sir Philip Meadows Mr. Sterry | Â Â Â | Â Â Â | Lattin | |
9Â Â Â 0 | Â | Mr. Drayden |
âMr. Drayden' is the poet John Dryden. The figures in the far left column are the number of yards of black cloth proposed and those in the next column the amount actually allocated (though an alternative interpretation is that the two columns represent the shillings and pence granted to buy the cloth).
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In the event, only the Lord Mayor of London and prominent City officials were granted the full nine yards of mourning cloth. Another document listing those who walked in the funeral procession shows that in the Privy Chamber at Somerset House, where the official mourners assembled before moving off down the Strand, was a party described as âSecretarys of ye ffrench & Latin Tongs'. This little company of poets and scholars included Dryden, Marvell, Milton, Nathaniel Sterry (another assistant Latin Secretary drafted in to replace Sir Philip Meadows, the man who had beaten Marvell to the post in 1653 and who was now a diplomat) and Samuel Hartlib, a friend of Milton and occasional government servant. As they all moved off down the Strand towards Westminster Abbey, âMr. Merville', whose name was next to Milton's in the official list, would have been able to steer the blind poet's steps during the foot procession towards the Abbey.
When Cromwell died, his body had been embalmed and removed from Whitehall to Somerset House, where it lay for many weeks in state, dressed in royal robes of purple and ermine with a golden sceptre in the hand and a crown on the head. The body was privately buried in the chapel of Henry VII in Westminster Abbey on 26 September, but the public funeral in which Marvell and Milton took part was held on 23 November. It was done with magnificent pomp at a cost of £60,000, which caused controversy within the Republican camp. The route taken by the mourners from Somerset House to the Abbey was lined by soldiers in new red coats with black buttons. A king would not have received a more lavish send-off.
Marvell retained his post as a Latin Secretary during the rule of Richard Cromwell and for some little time after, but it is clear that he was already contemplating a move from the civil service to a career in Parliamentary politics. If he were to stand as an MP then Hull, the town where he had so many associations and connections, was the obvious choice. Invariably shrewd in his career moves, Marvell may already have sensed that Richard Cromwell was not going to survive and that the era of powerful authoritarian rule by one man was over. A stronger Parliament, if not a Restoration, was more than likely. At the end of December Marvell set the wheels in motion for selection as a candidate with a request to his sister's husband, the local merchant Edmund Popple, to get him elected a burgess of the Hull Corporation. In the records of that body, the âBench Books', 28 December 1658 has the following entry: âThis day Mr Edmund Popple Sheriffe of this Towne came into this Board and acquainted them that his brother in law Mr Andrew Marvell made it his request that the Board would please to make him a free Burgesse of this Corporation, which the Bench takeing into consideration and accompting the good service he hath allready done for this Towne, they are pleased to grant him his freedome.'
3
The reference to the service Marvell had done for the town is intriguing and suggests that he may have used either his connections with Fairfax or his subsequent government connections to perform favours of some kind for Hull, possibly using his in-laws as the conduit.
Two weeks later, Richard Cromwell summoned a Parliament and Marvell stood as a candidate. He was elected on 10 January 1659 as one of a pair of representatives for Hull, his fellow MP being John Ramsden, the most significant merchant in the town. It was hardly a universal suffrage, the choice being made by the 500 or so freemen of the City, with Edmund Popple a prominent ally and canvasser on that body. Five days later Marvell wrote to Popple â in a letter that has survived as a puzzling fragment only â about some piece of politicking among the burgesses: âPray, what say our 86 men of the businesse & of me?'
4
But in spite of his ability to pull strings locally, Marvell lost his seat to the Republican Sir Henry Vane four months later when the Rump Parliament was temporarily restored in May in the wake of Richard Cromwell's political demise. During this period, however, he retained his civil service post, and continued to draw a salary for it. So far from being inconvenienced by the restored Rump â whose existence was to some degree a repudiation of the Cromwellians â Marvell was actually granted official lodgings in Whitehall on 14 July.
5
His superior, Thurloe, by contrast, was dismissed in May. As ever, Marvell was a survivor. Thurloe's replacement was the regicide Thomas Scott, a Republican with far less regard for Cromwell than his Latin Secretary, who continued in his employment until at least the autumn when the Council of State was dissolved by the army. On 25 October the Council issued an order for payment to Milton and Marvell of £86 12s each in arrears of pay, covering the period since Thurloe's fall in May.
6
During the early months of 1659, however, when Marvell was riding two horses, he wrote two letters that have survived and give his views (or, strictly, those of Thurloe) about the political situation under Richard. Both are written to Sir George Downing, the British resident at the Hague who had headed the move for offering the crown to Cromwell. On 11 February, Marvell wrote rather scathingly about the Republican argument in Parliament that power resided in the people and should not be handed over to another Protector. Their logic was: âThat it reuerted into this house by the death of his Highnesse, that Mr Speaker is Protector in possession and it will not be his wisdome to part with it easily, that this house is all England.'
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Marvell was unimpressed by this democratic essentialism and observed tartly: âBut we know well enough what they mean.' In spite of the anti-Richard faction's use of âall the tricks of Parliament' Marvell was optimistic that his side had a two-thirds majority that would âweare them out at the long runne'. Again on 25 March Marvell gave Downing another routine update of Parliamentary business. The bill fully recognising Richard's Protectorship was passed on 14 February.
While in London, and out of Parliament again, during the second half of 1659 and the early months of 1660, Marvell is said to have taken part in meetings of the âRota' and spoken there. This political club was founded by his friend James Harrington, the political theorist and author, in 1656, of the
Commonwealth of Oceana,
dedicated to Cromwell. The work was mentioned later by David Hume in his
Idea of a Perfect Commonwealth
as âthe only valuable model of a Commonwealth' extant. Harrington's notion was that power depends on the balance of property ownership and his treatise, in offering an economic interpretation of history, has led to his being called the first Marxist. Like Marvell he was impressed by the traditional Elizabethan notion of the body politic, and the continuity of the natural and social order in contrast to the more ruthlessly pragmatic political vision of Hobbes. Although a Republican, he took no active part in the Civil War and was said to have been deeply shocked by the execution of the King. His moderation would have made him attractive to Marvell. The Rota Club met regularly from November 1659 to February 1660 and was attended by Cyriack Skinner, Henry Neville (the political writer and translator of Macchiavelli), and John Aubrey, who wrote a brief life of Harrington in which it was revealed that Harrington wrote poetry âbut his Muse was rough' and Neville had to talk him out of persisting with it. He also described the meetings of the Club, which Marvell attended that winter:
⦠the beginning of Michaelmas-terme, he had ever night a meeting at the (then) Turke's head in the New Pallace-yard, where was made purposely a large ovall-table, with a passage in the middle for Miles to deliver his Coffee. About it sate his Disciples, and the Virtuosi. The Discourses in this Kind were the most ingeniose, and smart, that ever I heard, or expect to heare, and bandied with great eagernesse: the Arguments in the Parliament howse were but flatt to it.
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