Monk’s Gate … the West Sussex hamlet near Horsham where Vaughan Williams first heard the tune he used for Percy Dearmer’s rewriting of John Bunyan’s hymn (Photograph: Pete Chapman/Wikipedia)
Patrick Comerford
Today, the Calendar of Common Worship in the Church of England commemorates Jeremy Taylor, Bishop of Down and Connor, Teacher of the Faith (1667), with a Lesser Festival, and Florence Nightingale, Nurse, Social Reformer (1910), and Olivia Hill, Social Reformer (1912), with commemorations.
Before the day gets busy, I am taking some time this morning for reading, prayer and reflection.
This year marks the 150th anniversary of the composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, whose music is celebrated throughout this year’s Proms season. In my prayer diary for these weeks I am reflecting in these ways:
1, One of the readings for the morning;
2, Reflecting on a hymn or another piece of music by Vaughan Williams, often drawing, admittedly, on previous postings on the composer;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary, ‘Pray with the World Church.’
Jeremy Taylor … wrote about forgiveness as an essential part of Holy Living and Holy Dying
Jeremy Taylor (1613-1667) was born in Cambridge in 1613 and educated at Gonville and Caius College. He was ordained in 1633 and, as the Civil War got under way, he became a chaplain with the Royalist forces. He was captured and imprisoned briefly but after his release went to Wales, where the Earl of Carbery gave him refuge.
He wrote prolifically whilst there, notably The Rule and Exercise of Holy Living (1650) and of Holy Dying (1651). He went to Ireland in 1658 to lecture and two years later was made Bishop of Down and Connor. He found many of his clergy held to Presbyterianism and so ignored him; and the Roman Catholics rejected him as a Protestant. In turn, he treated both sides harshly.
His health was worn down by the protracted conflicts and he died on this day in 1667.
I was invited to preach on Jeremy Taylor at the Eucharist in the Chapel of Saint John the Baptist in Saint John’s Hospital without the Barrs, Lichfield, on 12 August 2009.
Jeremy Taylor, a leading Caroline Divine and Bishop of Down and Connor
Matthew 5: 17-20 (NRSVA):
[Jesus said:] 17 ‘Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets; I have come not to abolish but to fulfil. 18 For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth pass away, not one letter, not one stroke of a letter, will pass from the law until all is accomplished. 19 Therefore, whoever breaks one of the least of these commandments, and teaches others to do the same, will be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever does them and teaches them will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. 20 For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.’
Today’s reflection: ‘He who would Valiant be’
Ralph Vaughan Williams was the composer of symphonies, chamber music, opera, choral music, and film scores, a collector of English folk music and song. With Percy Dearmer, he co-edited the English Hymnal, in which he included many folk song arrangements as hymn tunes, and several of his own original compositions.
From Monday to Friday this week, I have been reflecting on the ‘Five Mystical Songs,’ composed by Vaughan Williams between 1906 and 1911and based on the poems by the 17th century Welsh-born English priest-poet George Herbert (1593-1633).
This morning [13 August 2022], I have chosen the hymn ‘He who would Valiant be’ also commonly known as ‘To be a Pilgrim,’ sung to the tune Monk’s Gate, which the New English Hymnal says was adapted from an old English folk song by Vaughan Williams. The words by Percy Dearmer (1867-1936) are a comprehensive reworking of an earlier, 17th century hymn by John Bunyan (1628-1688), the author of The Pilgrim’s Progress.
John Julian’s great Dictionary of Hymnody, revised in 1907, mentions Bunyan only to say that he did not write any hymns. This is Bunyan’s only known hymn and was first published in 1684 in Part 2 of The Pilgrim’s Progress. It recalls the words of Hebrews 11: 13: ‘… and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth.’
Bunyan’s words were modified extensively by Percy Dearmer for The English Hymnal (1906), with a new tune composed by Vaughan Williams, who used a traditional Sussex melody, ‘Monk’s Gate.’
This popular hymn tune is in 65 65 66 65, and it is the tune rather than the words that have made this hymn so memorable Edward Darling and Donald Davison, in their Companion to Church Hymnal, say it provides ‘a fine example of the use of syncopation and cross-rhythm in a hymn tune.’
Monk’s Gate is a hamlet in West Sussex, on the A281, 4.3 km south-east of Horsham. It was there in December 1904 that Vaughan Williams first heard the tune when he heard Harriet Verrall of Monk’s Gate singing the English folksong ‘Our Captain Calls All Hands.’ Harriet and Peter Verrall, who lived at Thrift Cottage, were also responsible for teaching Vaughan Williams the ‘Sussex Carol’ (‘On Christmas Night all Christians sing’) and the tune known as Sussex (‘Father, hear the prayer we offer’).
The song ‘Our Captain Calls All Hands’ tells of a woman deserted by her sailor lover:
How can you go abroad
fighting for strangers?
Why don’t you stay at home
free from all danger?
I will roll you in my arms,
my own dearest jewel,
So stay at home with me, love,
and don’t be cruel.
Vaughan Williams’s tune was published in the first edition of the English Hymnal in 1906.
Three years later, he heard the same tune being sung at Westhope, near Weobley, Herefordshire, by Ellen Powell with a folk song called ‘A Blacksmith Courted Me.’ This song has the same theme of love deserted:
A blacksmith courted me
Nine months and better
He fairly won my heart
Wrote me a letter.
With his hammer in his hand
He looked so clever
And if I was with my love
I would live forever …
Oh, witness have I none
Save God Almighty
And may he reward you well
For the slighting of me.
Her lips grew pale and wan
It made a poor heart tremble
To think she loved a one
And he proved deceitful …
This second song has been recorded by many of the folk rock bands that emerged from the late 1960s on. Steeleye Span lead off their first two studio albums Hark! The Village Wait (1970) and Please to See the King (1971) with different versions of the song as well as on several live albums. Planxty sing it on their first album Planxty (1973), and Pentangle on the album So Early in the Spring (1989). Maddy Prior of Steeleye Span also sings an a cappella version on her solo album Year (1993).
In the early 1970s, I was enjoying the music of English folk rock bands such as Steeleye Span, Pentangle, Fairport Convention, Lindisfarne and Jethro Thull. Their music provided an interesting bridge to the music of Vaughan Williams, which I was introduced to in rural Shropshire.
The adaptation of Monk’s Gate by Vaughan Williams brought new attention to Bunyan’s much-forgotten poem, which was hidden in the second part of The Pilgrim’s Progress. But the words sung to Monk’s Gate are no longer those penned by Bunyan, whose poem begins:
Who would true valour see,
Let him come hither;
One here will constant be,
Come wind, come weather.
The version in the English Hymnal is the one rewritten by Percy Dearmer and begins:
He who would valiant be
’Gainst all disaster,
Let him in constancy
Follow the Master.
The Master, of course, is Christ, and Dearmer also introduced explicit references to the Lord and the Spirit, making a Trinitarian hymn of a poem that was written as an allegory and with lyrics that are only metaphorically Christian. But Dearmer also cut out Bunyan’s references to a lion, a hobgoblin and foul fiend.
Bunyan’s original was not commonly sung in churches, perhaps because of the references to ‘hobgoblin’ and ‘foul fiend.’ Some recent hymnbooks have returned to Bunyan’s original, including the Church of England’s Common Praise and the Church of Scotland’s Hymns of Glory, Songs of Praise, and it has been popular with English folk rock artists such as Maddy Prior and the Carnival Band.
The two versions of the hymn are included in the Irish Church Hymnal (No 662), which also uses the tune Monk’s Gate for Herbert O’Driscoll’s hymn ‘Who are we who stand and sing?’ (No 532).
‘To Be a Pilgrim’ is the school hymn for many schools throughout England, and is sung in several school films. In Lindsay Anderson’s film if.... (1968), it characterises the traditional religious education in English public schools in the 1960s. It is also sung again in a public school context in Clockwise (1986), starring John Cleese, who directs all of the members of the Headmasters’ Conference to stand and sing the hymn, as he often would with his own pupils.
This was one of the hymns chosen by Margaret Thatcher for her funeral in April 2013. But the hymn was also one of Tony Benn’s choices on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs.
The hymn’s refrain ‘to be a pilgrim’ has entered common usage in the English language and has been used in the title of many books about pilgrimage.
From his childhood, Vaughan Williams had been attracted to the sturdy and simple prose of John Bunyan, with its sincerity and spiritual intensity. Vaughan Williams described his Pilgrim’s Progress as a ‘Morality’ rather than an opera, although he intended the work to be performed on stage rather than in a church or cathedral.
Vaughan Williams later made an opera of Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress, although he changed the hero’s name from Christian to Pilgrim. I shall return to Bunyan, Vaughan Williams, and The Pilgrim’s Progress when I invite you to listen with me to ‘The Song of the Tree of Life,’ a song from that opera.
‘He who would valiant be’
He who would valiant be
’Gainst all disaster,
Let him in constancy
Follow the Master.
There’s no discouragement
Shall make him once relent
His first avowed intent
To be a pilgrim.
Who so beset him round
With dismal stories
Do but themselves confound –
His strength the more is.
No foes shall stay his might;
Though he with giants fight,
He will make good his right
To be a pilgrim.
Since, Lord, thou dost defend
Us with thy Spirit,
We know we at the end,
Shall life inherit.
Then fancies flee away!
I’ll fear not what men say,
I’ll labour night and day
To be a pilgrim.
Today’s Prayer:
The Collect:
Holy and loving God,
you dwell in the human heart
and make us partakers of the divine nature
in Christ our great high priest:
help us who remember your servant Jeremy Taylor
to put our trust in your heavenly promises
and follow a holy life in virtue and true godliness;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post Communion Prayer:
God of truth,
whose Wisdom set her table
and invited us to eat the bread and drink the wine
of the kingdom:
help us to lay aside all foolishness
and to live and walk in the way of insight,
that we may come with your servant Jeremy Taylor
to the eternal feast of heaven;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Saturday 13 August 2022:
The theme in the USPG prayer diary this week has been ‘International Youth Day.’ It was introduced on Sunday by Dorothy deGraft Johnson, a Law student from Ghana.
The USPG Prayer Diary invites us to pray today in these words:
Let us pray for ordinands of all ages. May they be supported at the beginning of their ministry.
Yesterday’s reflection
Continued tomorrow
Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicised Edition copyright © 1989, 1995, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org
13 August 2022
A musical, walking tour of
historical Jewish Cork is so
popular it is booked out
Cork’s last synagogue synagogue on South Terrace closed in 2016 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
Today (12 August 2022) is Tu B’Av (ט״ו באב) – the 15th of the Hebrew month of Av – which is a minor Jewish holiday. It originally marked the beginning of the grape harvest but is often marked today as the Hebrew-Jewish Day of Love, a Jewish equivalent of Valentine’s Day.
This is a day of joy that follows Tisha B’Av by six days and contrasts with the sadness of Tisha B’Av.
Shabbat Nahamu, the name given to Shabbat this weekend, takes its name the haftara or reading (Isaiah 40: 1-26), which begins Nahamu, nahamu ‘ami, ‘Be consoled, be consoled, my nation’. The prophet reassures the people that God will not forsake them and he will forever hold to his covenant.
The term nehama (נחמה) is often used as a consolation from mourning, but is a special kind of consolation, expressing regret or a changing of mind in which we somehow recognise that our original course or path is no longer viable or available. God uses this term when he resolves to flood the earth after creation and it is used again when God decides to forgive the people after they have worshipped the Golden Calf.
As the Jewish calendar moves away from the Ninth of Ab, the focus is now on what can be done that is viable and meaningful for the future.
I was writing two weeks ago about an online presentation on Irish Jewish history, ‘Dublin’s ‘Little Jerusalem’: A Jewish History of Ireland,’ a 90-minute talk by Alexander Vard looking at the story of the Jewish community in Ireland (31 July 2022).
This weekend, as part of Cork Heritage Open Day tomorrow, Ruti Lachs is leading a Cork Jewish Culture Musical Guided Walk in Cork City tomorrow morning (13 August) at 11 am.
This weekend walk takes about 1 hour 15 minutes. But it is so popular and in such demand that within four hours of the Cork Heritage Open Day website going live, all tickets were all taken up.
If you are disappointed at missing this opportunity tomorrow, then Ruti Lachs has decided to run another walk, the last of the summer, at 11 am on Sunday 28 August.
Ruti Lachs is a musician and a member of the Cork Jewish Community. In her walks, she takes visitors through the historic – and more recent – Jewish sites in Cork City, telling stories of the old community, and playing some klezmer music and Yiddish songs, the music of the Lithuanian Jews who made their home in Cork 130 years ago. There is plenty of time too for questions.
The site of the Sephardic cemetery in Cork was discovered in Kemp Street, on the south-east corner of White Street, to the rear of the Cork Hebrew Congregation’s synagogue in South Terrace, which closed in 2016 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The first Jewish community in Cork was a relatively small group of Sephardi Jews, founded when Jews from Portugal settled in the city in the mid-18th century.
According to some sources, the community was established sometime between 1731 and 1747. Other sources say the Sephardi Jews did not settle in Cork until 1772, although there are reports of Jews in the city in 1771. Relatively little is known of these Jews and it is uncertain whether they established a synagogue, although they had their own Jewish burial ground in Kemp Street. This community appears to have died out by 1796.
Later, an Ashkenazi community was established in the late 19th century, and founded the Cork Hebrew Congregation on South Terrace in 1881. A short while after, there was a split in the community and a second congregation, the Remnant of Israel Synagogue, was established. The two rival congregations continued to exist until unity was restored after 30 years. Another short-lived breakaway congregation, the Cork Hebrew Congregation, was formed on Union Quay in 1915.
The Jewish community in Cork continued to grow after World War I, and reached its zenith in the 1930s with 400-500 people.
Shalom Park at Monerea Terrace was developed in 1989 on land donated by Cork Gas Company, which provided the traditional style lighting in the park. By then, however, numbers were declining, and only a handful of Jews remained in Cork by 2016. The Cork Hebrew Congregation closed the synagogue and sold the premises that year, bringing to an end some 135 years of continuous Jewish congregational presence in the city.
Then, following the closure of the synagogue, new group emerged in 2016. At first it called itself the Munster Jewish Community, and it is now known as Cork Jewish Community.
This community describes itself as ‘a community without a shul.’ Although based in Cork, membership is a broad mix of Jews throughout Munster, living, working, studying or visiting Cork, Clare, Kerry, Limerick, Tipperary and Waterford.
Cork Jewish Community is unaffiliated and has a predominantly Liberal and Reform flavour, but it warmly welcomes individuals and families from all Jewish affiliations. It is an eclectic community, with new faces from Turkey, Israel, America, South Africa, Ukraine, and even Dublin, as well as Irish and English long-term members.
Recently, the community had a lively Shavuot service with about 20 participants and five different cheesecake recipes. The service included a reading from the Book of Ruth led by Sarah Goldberg, a facilitated discussion led by Sophia Spiegel, music from Fresh Air Collective, klezmer dancing, and a sing-along.
The Guided Musical Walk of Cork Jewish Heritage is a led by Ruti Lachs, a member of local music group the Fresh Air Collective, and formerly Pop-Up Klezmer. She may be joined by another musician for a short performance of klezmer music and Yiddish song.
She has been researching the old community in Cork through interviews with local people and former residents of Cork around the world. Her research was collated into two documentary videos, ‘Cork Jewish Culture Virtual Walk’ and ‘Memories of a Cork Jewish Childhood,’ both made during the pandemic.
The video exploring the history and culture of Cork Jewish communities past and present won a Irish National Heritage Week award in 2020. It was produced by Ruti Lachs, co-presented by Marnina Winkler and Val Davin, filmed by Fintan Lucy and edited by Wombat Media.
Shabbat Shalom
Patrick Comerford
Today (12 August 2022) is Tu B’Av (ט״ו באב) – the 15th of the Hebrew month of Av – which is a minor Jewish holiday. It originally marked the beginning of the grape harvest but is often marked today as the Hebrew-Jewish Day of Love, a Jewish equivalent of Valentine’s Day.
This is a day of joy that follows Tisha B’Av by six days and contrasts with the sadness of Tisha B’Av.
Shabbat Nahamu, the name given to Shabbat this weekend, takes its name the haftara or reading (Isaiah 40: 1-26), which begins Nahamu, nahamu ‘ami, ‘Be consoled, be consoled, my nation’. The prophet reassures the people that God will not forsake them and he will forever hold to his covenant.
The term nehama (נחמה) is often used as a consolation from mourning, but is a special kind of consolation, expressing regret or a changing of mind in which we somehow recognise that our original course or path is no longer viable or available. God uses this term when he resolves to flood the earth after creation and it is used again when God decides to forgive the people after they have worshipped the Golden Calf.
As the Jewish calendar moves away from the Ninth of Ab, the focus is now on what can be done that is viable and meaningful for the future.
I was writing two weeks ago about an online presentation on Irish Jewish history, ‘Dublin’s ‘Little Jerusalem’: A Jewish History of Ireland,’ a 90-minute talk by Alexander Vard looking at the story of the Jewish community in Ireland (31 July 2022).
This weekend, as part of Cork Heritage Open Day tomorrow, Ruti Lachs is leading a Cork Jewish Culture Musical Guided Walk in Cork City tomorrow morning (13 August) at 11 am.
This weekend walk takes about 1 hour 15 minutes. But it is so popular and in such demand that within four hours of the Cork Heritage Open Day website going live, all tickets were all taken up.
If you are disappointed at missing this opportunity tomorrow, then Ruti Lachs has decided to run another walk, the last of the summer, at 11 am on Sunday 28 August.
Ruti Lachs is a musician and a member of the Cork Jewish Community. In her walks, she takes visitors through the historic – and more recent – Jewish sites in Cork City, telling stories of the old community, and playing some klezmer music and Yiddish songs, the music of the Lithuanian Jews who made their home in Cork 130 years ago. There is plenty of time too for questions.
The site of the Sephardic cemetery in Cork was discovered in Kemp Street, on the south-east corner of White Street, to the rear of the Cork Hebrew Congregation’s synagogue in South Terrace, which closed in 2016 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The first Jewish community in Cork was a relatively small group of Sephardi Jews, founded when Jews from Portugal settled in the city in the mid-18th century.
According to some sources, the community was established sometime between 1731 and 1747. Other sources say the Sephardi Jews did not settle in Cork until 1772, although there are reports of Jews in the city in 1771. Relatively little is known of these Jews and it is uncertain whether they established a synagogue, although they had their own Jewish burial ground in Kemp Street. This community appears to have died out by 1796.
Later, an Ashkenazi community was established in the late 19th century, and founded the Cork Hebrew Congregation on South Terrace in 1881. A short while after, there was a split in the community and a second congregation, the Remnant of Israel Synagogue, was established. The two rival congregations continued to exist until unity was restored after 30 years. Another short-lived breakaway congregation, the Cork Hebrew Congregation, was formed on Union Quay in 1915.
The Jewish community in Cork continued to grow after World War I, and reached its zenith in the 1930s with 400-500 people.
Shalom Park at Monerea Terrace was developed in 1989 on land donated by Cork Gas Company, which provided the traditional style lighting in the park. By then, however, numbers were declining, and only a handful of Jews remained in Cork by 2016. The Cork Hebrew Congregation closed the synagogue and sold the premises that year, bringing to an end some 135 years of continuous Jewish congregational presence in the city.
Then, following the closure of the synagogue, new group emerged in 2016. At first it called itself the Munster Jewish Community, and it is now known as Cork Jewish Community.
This community describes itself as ‘a community without a shul.’ Although based in Cork, membership is a broad mix of Jews throughout Munster, living, working, studying or visiting Cork, Clare, Kerry, Limerick, Tipperary and Waterford.
Cork Jewish Community is unaffiliated and has a predominantly Liberal and Reform flavour, but it warmly welcomes individuals and families from all Jewish affiliations. It is an eclectic community, with new faces from Turkey, Israel, America, South Africa, Ukraine, and even Dublin, as well as Irish and English long-term members.
Recently, the community had a lively Shavuot service with about 20 participants and five different cheesecake recipes. The service included a reading from the Book of Ruth led by Sarah Goldberg, a facilitated discussion led by Sophia Spiegel, music from Fresh Air Collective, klezmer dancing, and a sing-along.
The Guided Musical Walk of Cork Jewish Heritage is a led by Ruti Lachs, a member of local music group the Fresh Air Collective, and formerly Pop-Up Klezmer. She may be joined by another musician for a short performance of klezmer music and Yiddish song.
She has been researching the old community in Cork through interviews with local people and former residents of Cork around the world. Her research was collated into two documentary videos, ‘Cork Jewish Culture Virtual Walk’ and ‘Memories of a Cork Jewish Childhood,’ both made during the pandemic.
The video exploring the history and culture of Cork Jewish communities past and present won a Irish National Heritage Week award in 2020. It was produced by Ruti Lachs, co-presented by Marnina Winkler and Val Davin, filmed by Fintan Lucy and edited by Wombat Media.
Shabbat Shalom
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