Gossip in a Library eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 195 pages of information about Gossip in a Library.

Gossip in a Library eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 195 pages of information about Gossip in a Library.

Yet it is not really the picture of a dead man:  it represents the result of one of the grimmest freaks that ever entered into a pious mind.  In the early part of March 1630 (1631), the great Dr. Donne, Dean of St. Paul’s, being desperately ill, and not likely to recover, called a wood-carver in to the Deanery, and ordered a small urn, just large enough to hold his feet, and a board as long as his body, to be produced.  When these articles were ready, they were brought into his study, which was first warmed, and then the old man stripped off his clothes, wrapped himself in a winding-sheet which was open only so far as to reveal the face and beard, and then stood upright in the little wooden urn, supported by leaning against the board.  His limbs were arranged like those of dead persons, and when his eyes had been closed, a painter was introduced into the room and desired to make a full-length and full-size picture of this terrific object, this solemn theatrical presentment of life in death.  The frontispiece of Death’s Duel gives a reproduction of the upper part of this picture.  It was said to be a remarkably truthful portrait of the great poet and divine, and it certainly agrees in all its proportions with the accredited portrait of Donne as a young man.

It appears (for Walton’s account is not precise) that it was after standing for this grim picture, but before its being finished, that the Dean preached his last sermon, that which is here printed.  He had come up from Essex in great physical weakness in order not to miss his appointment to preach in his cathedral before the King on the first Friday in Lent.  He entered the pulpit with so emaciated a frame and a face so pale and haggard, and spoke with a voice so faint and hollow, that at the end the King himself turned to one of his suite, and whispered, “The Dean has preached his own funeral sermon!” So, indeed, it proved to be; for he presently withdrew to his bed, and summoned his friends around to take a solemn farewell.  He died very gradually after about a fortnight, his last words being, not in distress or anguish, but as it would seem in visionary rapture:  “I were miserable if I might not die.”  All this fortnight and to the moment of his death, the terrible life-sized portrait of himself in his winding-sheet stood near his bedside, where it could be the “hourly object” of his attention.  So one of the greatest Churchmen of the seventeenth century, and one of the greatest, if the most eccentric, of its lyrical poets passed away in the very pomp of death, on the 31st of March, 1631.

There was something eminently calculated to arrest and move the imagination in such an end as this, and people were eager to read the discourse which the “sacred authority” of his Majesty himself had styled the Dean’s funeral sermon.  It was therefore printed in 1632.  As sermons of the period go it is not long, yet it takes a full hour to read it slowly aloud, and we may thus estimate

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Gossip in a Library from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.