The
Bible in English: its history and influence
David Daniell
Yale University Press; 2003; £24.95; Hardback; xx. 900p.;
ISBN 03000099304
Before going home we glanced at the bookstall. To my surprise Peneleope
asked if I should like for my birthday Professor David Daniell's The
Bible in English. The morning had been taken up with the author's stimulating
lecture on William Tyndale. Hastily agreeing lest I should lose the present
I was unsurprised to see the dedication to this 'translator of genius,
martyred for giving English readers the Bible from the original languages'.
Having tried to summarise the contents of this enormous tome, I reluctantly
gave up. Instead I refer our erudite members to David Norton's detailed
review in the Journal of Theological Studies (Oct. 2004), pp. 696-702.
He pulls no punches. Virtually every paragraph has adverse criticism
alongside praise; but he ends with this: “In the later chapters
that pursue the theme of artists and the Bible, the concentration is
not always squarely on the artists in relation to the Bible, so some
of the sections such as that on Blake seem tangential and like missed
opportunities. Nevertheless, read as separate essays when necessary,
they are illuminating. They suggest ways of meeting the challenge of
giving a really good account of the Bible in the life of English literature,
music and art.”
Contributed by: John S. Andrews, MA, PhD, MCLIP, a
Life Vice-President of the Librarians’ Christian Fellowship and
a former Sub-Librarian of the University of Lancaster.