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Susanna and English Communities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 February 2016
Extract
The story of Susanna and the Elders, found in the apocryphal thirteenth chapter of Daniel, part of the Greek version of the Book of Daniel, is richly suggestive of its likely appeal to poets and artists. It is set during the Babylonian Captivity and recounts events concerning the Jewish community within Babylon. Susanna is the beautiful and chaste wife of a wealthy man, Joachim, whose home serves as a seat of justice for his fellow Jews. While bathing in their garden, Susanna is spied upon and accosted by two judges of Israel who frequent her husband's house. They invite her to satisfy both of them or suffer the penalty for a charge of adultery, which they will bring against her. She refuses, saying that she would rather fall into their hands than sin in the sight of God. She is tried unveiled before the people. Led off to execution, Susanna calls out to God, who stirs up the spirit of the young Daniel. Daniel's skill in separating the elders before asking for details of their evidence against Susanna reveals their perjury, and they are put to death by the crowd. The tale is certainly courtroom drama, but it is also a narrative of transgressions — of female chastity and modesty, of the household and property, of justice itself.
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References
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79 New York, Pierpont Morgan MS 818 (Ingilby MS), ca. 1425–75. According to the Pierpont Morgan notes, this manuscript is possibly from Yorkshire and possibly associated with the Cistercian abbey of Fountains. However as Ralph Hanna noted in a private communication, it is linked with Fountains because it was long owned by the Ingilbys of Ripley, who may have pillaged Fountains at the Dissolution. It contains A Pistel of Susan, Rolle's Form of Living, and the earliest known version of the A-text of Piers Plowman. The other two manuscripts are: BL Cotton Caligula A.ii, part 1 (ca. 1440–60). This manuscript contains a number of romances, as well as the Siege of Jerusalem and moral and religious works. For a description of this manuscript, in which A Pistel of Susan appears in a separate booklet at the head, see Hanna, Ralph and Lawton, David, eds., The Siege of Jerusalem EETS, 320 (Oxford, 2003), xxiv-xxvi. And Huntington HM 114, (ca. 1425–50), which contains a text of Piers Plowman, but also of Mandeville's Travels, Three Kings of Cologne, and Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde. See Dutschke, C. W. et al., Guide to Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Huntington Library (San Marino, CA, 1989), 150–52.Google Scholar
80 Peck, , Pistel of Swete Susan (n. 62 above), 78, quotes Doyle's comments from his Introduction to the Vernon Facsimile (The Vernon Manuscript [n. 58 above], 15–16), to which I refer. See also my remarks in Languages of Power (n. 59 above), 340–45.Google Scholar
81 The history of the Bohun family is inevitably a history of English books and book-making. See, for example, Sandler, Lucy Freeman, The Lichtenthal Psalter and the Manuscript Patronage of the Bohun Family (London, 2004). Joan and her husband Humphrey were important patrons of many religious foundations, especially Walden Abbey in Essex. Joan also helped found a chantry in the Cistercian abbey of Coggeshall in Essex (see Dugdale, , Monasticon [n. 9 above], 451), and her son-in-law, Thomas of Woodstock, a notorious book collector himself, was deeply involved with Melsa in Yorkshire. For books associated with both, see Cavanaugh, Sheila H., “A Study of Books Privately Owned in England, 1300–1450,” Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1980.Google Scholar
82 See Saul, Nigel, Richard II (New Haven, 1997), 373–75.Google Scholar
83 Goodman, Anthony, “The Countess and the Rebels: Essex and a Crisis in English Society,” Essex Archaeology and History: The Transactions of the Essex Archaeological Society 2 (1972): 274. On forfeiture, see Ross, C. D., “Forfeiture for Treason in the Reign of Richard II,” English Historical Review 71 (1956): 560–75.Google Scholar
84 Jeffrey, David Lyle (“False Witness and the Just Use of Evidence in the Wycliffite Pistel of Swete Susan,” in The Judgment of Susanna: Authority and Witness , ed. Spol-sky, Ellen [Atlanta, 1996], 57–71) has argued that A Pistel should be situated “in the context of Wycliffite concerns about oppression by false witnesses” (69). His argument is rich and informative, but the manuscripts in which the poem appears do not warrant the identification. But see also his discussion of later Wycliffite allusions to Susanna.Google Scholar
85 In Two Wycliffite Texts , ed. Hudson, Anne, EETS 301 (Oxford, 1993), 24–93 at 35. See Jeffrey, , “False Witness,” 66–67 for Wyclif's references to her as an example of injustice.Google Scholar
86 For editions of the sermon, see Knight, Ione Kemp, Wimbledon's Sermon: “Redde Rationem Villicationis Tue”: A Middle English Sermon of the Fourteenth Century (Pitts burgh, 1967); and Owen, Nancy H., “Thomas Wimbledon's Sermon: ‘Redde racionem villicacionis tue,”’ Mediaeval Studies 28 (1966): 176–97. This sermon is extant in fifteen manuscripts; it was also printed eighteen times between 1550 and 1635 and carried over into Foxe's Acts and Monuments. For detailed manuscript information, see Knight's, I. K. introduction (Wimbledon's Sermon).Google Scholar
87 Fisher, John, A Spiritual consolation written … to hys sister Elizabeth (London, 1578); Ridley, Nicholas, An Account of a Disputation at Oxford, anno dom. 1554, with A Treatise of the Blessed Sacrament (London, 1685); and Raleigh, Walter Sir, The Arraignment and Conviction of Sr. Walter Rawleigh … on 17 November 1603 (London, 1648).Google Scholar
88 Garter, Thomas, The commody of the Moste Virtuous and Godlye Susanna (London, 1578); Roche, Robert, Eustathia, or the Constancie of Susanna (London, 1599); Aylett, Robert, Susanna: or, the Arraignment of the Two Vniust Elders (London, 1622).Google Scholar
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