No
soft incense: Barbara Pym and the church
Edited by Hazel K. Bell
Anna Brown Associates and the Barbara Pym Society
2004; £7.50; (56p. P&p); Pbk.; 115p.;
ISBN 0954331664
Available from the Barbara Pym Society,
St. Hilda's College, Oxford, OX4 1DY.
Most of the thirteen papers in this volume were originally presented
at meetings or conferences of the Barbara Pym Society, a very active
organisation based at St. Hilda's College, Oxford. They are preceded
by an amusing foreword by James Runcie, writer and film-maker and son
of a former Archbishop of Canterbury.
In the first paper, the Rev. David Cockerell considers the relevance
of the church of Barbara Pym to the world and church of today. He states
that probably few English novelists of the post-war period have described
the church so sympathetically and humourously. Her churches are generally
Anglo-Catholic, hence the title of the book, and the next contribution,
by Robert Smith, explores London churches with Barbara Pym. Surprisingly
the twelve churches described do not include that beacon of Anglo-Catholicism,
All Saints, Margaret Street.
There are two contributions by Kate Charles. First, a mini-history of
Anglo-Catholicism (very mini, consisting of two pages only), which includes
an amusing 'Anglo-Catholic A-Z' (for example, B is for Biretta, G is
for Going over to Rome, H is for High Mass/Low Mass, V is for Vestments).
In the second ('At ease with the ladies: Barbara Pym and the clergy'),
she discusses “Barbara Pym's clergy in relation to the women
in their lives: their wives, their sisters, above all those worthy parish
women who support, cherish and pamper them and – heaven help them – even
fall in love with them”. Triona Adams also considers clergy wives
('Roman matrons and Christian martyrs').
Father Gabriel Myers, a monk of St. Anselm's Abbey, Washington, DC,
has three contributions: a monkish view, a pilgrimage in search of Barbara
Pym and the Victorian hymn. I was amused by the reference to Pym sometimes
feeling 'churched out' and her tongue-in-cheek proposal to give up going
to church for Lent. Father Myers sympathised with this proposal but,
like her, never quite had the courage to do so.
In 'Communal rites: tea, wine and Milton in Barbara Pym's novels', Judy
B. McInnis demonstrates Pym's “subversive use of Milton through
an investigation of the nature of love in relation to the rituals of
tea and wine consumption in her novels”. She states that the mingling
of sacred and profane love fascinated Barbara Pym as much as it did Milton,
to whom she often alludes.
In the other contributions, Eleonore Bilber considers Anglo-Catholicism
in Pym's novels; Joy Grant discusses Roman Catholicism in her novels;
Father Gerard Irvine provides a clerical directory from the novels; and
Tim Burnett examines social class, “one of the principal motors
of Pym's fiction and certainly one of the principal sources of her humour”,
and her clergy.
Inevitably, in a collection such as this, there is occasional repetition.
For example, we are told that Pym wrote about Ronald Knox “what
a pity it was he ever went over to Rome and how beastly to do it and
become a Roman priest” on page 30 (by Eleonore Bilber) and on page
32 (by Joy Grant). Of course a number of Anglo-Catholic priests (including
a former Bishop of London) went over to Rome when the Church of England
admitted women priests and I wonder what Barbara Pym would have thought
of women in the priesthood. On page 56 Kate Charles quotes an extract
from A Glass of Blessings in which Sir Denbigh, following a comment about
clergymen always being surrounded by women at social functions, says “It
makes one wonder whether it would really be proper to admit women to
Holy Orders. Is it likely that a woman would be surrounded by men at
a parish gathering and would it be seemly if she were?”
As one would expect from a former editor of The Indexer and the winner
of the Wheatley Medal for an outstanding index, the book has an excellent
index. I would like, however, to have seen entries under Evangelical
church, low church, transubstantiation and vestments and a cross-reference
from high church to Anglo-Catholicism.
I really enjoyed reading this book. I have to confess that I have never
read Barbara Pym and the contributions to this collection have made me
resolve to do something about this. Perhaps when our Interregnum at church
is over I shall have more time to do some leisure reading.
Contributed by Ken Bakewell, MA, MCMI, FCLIP, a Life
Vice-President of the Librarians’ Christian Fellowship and Emeritus
Professor of Information and Library Management at the Liverpool John
Moores University.