David's Crown: Sounding the Psalms
M**G
If you love the Psalter and enjoy poetry you will cherish David’s Crown
Malcolm Guite conceived and wrote this book during the earliest months of the pandemic. There is an irony in this origin, for corona, a word that had eluded most of us until a year ago, can refer to a crown or coronet of poems. These 150 poems are a collection—one poem per psalm. They also combine to form a single poem. A 2,250-line epic which is greater than the sum of its parts. It is a majestic response to the biblical Psalter, the original Davidic corona.The Psalter comprises poems of very different lengths. The longest, Psalm 119, is around 200 times longer that the shortest, Psalm 117. Here in David’s Crown Guite adopts a poetic convention such that each poem is the same length and of the same form. In honour of the canonical crown each of his responses has fifteen lines, a nod to the 150 psalms. He also adopts another convention in following John Donne who linked seven poems, each adopting as its first line the last one of the previous poem. This is more than a clever and arbitrary stylistic whim. This convention celebrates another feature of the Psalter, the pairing of each psalm with its neighbours. The resulting concatenation within the Psalter is achieved in more complex ways than in Guite’s response—it includes various devices such as keywords pairs, repeated phrases, alternating patterns of day and night, matching interests and/or theological progression. As Paula Gooder reminds us in the introduction to David’s Crown, the Psalms also have a narrative that ties and binds them together. This can be seen as a journey of petition down to, and through, the low of Psalm 88, followed by a gentling rising path of praise. This culminates with Psalm 150’s unabandoned doxology.The story within the Psalter is also the narrative of the Davidic kings and God’s kingship. Guite’s response reveals this story with a thoroughgoing Christian reading—this might be David’s Crown but in the 150 episodes we find Christ eclipsing David. This interpretive lens is, of course, that made by the Second Testament and many of the Church Fathers, including most notably Augustine and his interpretive paradigm of the total Christ (totus Christus). As Guite puts it, his work forms ‘a chaplet of praise to garland the head of the one who wore the Corona Spinea, the crown of thorns for us, and who has suffered with us through the corona pandemic [p.xv].’So far, so good, this collection has a form that both echoes the 150 psalms it celebrates and has a coherent and insightful form. Is the execution as good as the conception? In short, the answer is a resounding yes. Each response is a delight in its own right. Doubtless readers will have different favourites. I particularly enjoyed the reflection on Psalm 39 because of its playful allusion to Leonard Cohen’s famous proverb about light and cracks. The response to Psalm 118, despite its brevity before its subject, works with many of the ideas and words found there in a beautiful fresh way. The 125th meditation is poignant, it is a prayer dedicating the collection as a thanksgiving offering. If each poem is a delight, then the whole can only be described as sublime. The single-minded form does not wear thin but rather provides a sort of theological and Christological perpetual motion—one reaches the end only to find that the last line of Psalm 150 provides the opening to the collection.Guite explains that this is a response to the Coverdale version of the Psalms from the Book of Common Prayer. This is evident in the Latin headings to each poem and frequently in the language of the compositions. Nevertheless, is very much a contemporary poetry collection, it just knows how to cherish light from the past. There are allusions, both explicit and implicit, to the likes of John Donne, Julian of Norwich, John Bunyan, William Blake, Gregorio Allegri and Robert Alter. This peppering of imbibers and interpreters reminds us that behind these poems lie not just the ancient Psalms themselves but an age of their inspirational legacy—more profoundly still we perceive the Spirit breathing across some three millennia.If you love the Psalter and enjoy poetry you will cherish David’s Crown.
R**Y
Fascinating
An interesting read alongside the psalms in the bible
M**E
An absolute treasure
I love reading Malcolm’s work alongside the original Psalm. They give me every time a new depth of understanding and insight.
C**S
Inspiration from the Psalms
For those who love poetry and also love the Psalms, this is the perfect book to dip into each day
A**E
Poetic reflections on all 150 psalms
And an amazing tour de force. A great way in to understanding and therefore reading the psalms
M**P
A wonderful poetry collection
A wonderful collection of poems to explore the Psalms. Dazzling, beautiful and deepening our views of God and man.
S**C
Enriching book
Enriching book
M**U
Well Intentioned.
I didn't find this book on the Psalms spiritually satisfying. Malcolm Guite's idea of weaving the Psalms into a corona was a good one. However this was not the intention of the original authors. The Psalms of David are unique and stand alone as they were written They express the thoughts, sorrows, prayers and hopes of Ancient Israel. They were the Prayer Book of the Jews and subsequently of Jesus. The Church inherited them and made them the basis of the Divine Office each day. I'm sure than many Christians may find Malcolm Guite's book helpful. That is to the Good, if it introduces them to the treasures of the Psalms. But the Psalms as they were originally intended make wonderful sense without adding to them.
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