Dorothy L. Sayers, writer and theologian
17 December 1957
Dorothy Leigh Sayers was an English writer and scholar, born at
Oxford in 1893, the only child of an Anglican clergyman. She studied
medieval literature at Oxford (Somerville College), being one of the
first women to graduate (1915) from that university. Her first
published writings were two volumes of verse,
- 1916 Op. 1
[Note: "Opus" is Latin for a work, especially an
artistic production.]
- 1919 Catholic Tales and Christian Songs
Here (from memory) is the start of a poem from the former volume:
Christ walks the world again, his lute upon his back,
his red robe worn to tatters, his riches gone to rack.
The wind that wakes the morning blows his hair about his face,
and his arms and legs are ragged with the thorny briar's embrace,
for the hunt is up behind him, and his sword is at his side.
Christ the bonny outlaw walks the whole world wide,
singing: "Lady, lady, will you come away with me,
to lie among the bracken, and eat the barley bread?
We shall see new suns arise, in golden far-off skies,
for the son of God and woman has not where to lay his head."
She worked for several years writing advertising copy, until she was
able to support herself by the sale of her books and stories.
In the following (selective) list of her works, I have made bold
the ones that I think to be particularly good.
Detective Fiction:
Miss Sayers's first commercially successful writings were detective
fiction, and she eventually rose to the very top of that field. In
Howard Haycraft's The Art of The Mystery Story, a collection of
every notable essay on the detective story written before 1948, her
name is mentioned more frequently than that of anyone except
Sherlock Holmes. She wrote mostly about Lord Peter Wimsey, a
wealthy gentleman and scholar, lover of rare books and fine wines,
who solved detective cases because he enjoyed it, and was good at
it, and because it was a job worth doing.
In case anyone is wondering what a writer of detective fiction is
doing on a list of memorable Christian writers, I reply that a
detective story can present the thoughtful reader with many
observations and questions about the nature of good and evil, about
difficult moral choices, and about ways of dealing with others.
Detective stories, like books of any other kind, vary in quality.
When you open a novel by Sayers, and find that the first words are
Thou blind man's mark, thou fool's self-chosen snare,
Fond fancy's scum, and dregs of scattered thought,
Band of all evils, cradle of causeless care,
Thou web of will, whose end is never wrought,
Desire, desire! I have too dearly bought,
With price of mangled mind, thy worthless ware.
you know that you are not reading a run-of-the-mill whodunit.
Her Wimsey books include:
- 1923 Whose Body? In this book Sayers is in the process of
creating the character of Lord Peter, and accordingly she tells us
that he is witty, instead of simply recording his conversation and
leaving us to think, "How witty he is!" (The reader will have
noticed the same approach in A Study in Scarlet, the first of the
Sherlock Holmes stories.) The story begins as a respectable
architect walks into his bathroom in the morning and finds there the
body of a complete stranger, naked except for a pair of pince-nez.
- 1926 Clouds of Witness Lord Peter's brother, the Duke of
Denver, is tried for murder in the House of Lords.
-
1927 Unnatural Death (or The Dawson Pedigree)
An elderly cancer
patient dies suddenly, her death not explained by her illness.
However, no means and no motive suggest themselves. Lord Peter is
assisted by the elderly Miss Climpson, a devout Christian.
- 1928 The Unpleasantness at The Bellona Club
A retired general
is found dead in his armchair at his club. The inheritance of a
considerable fortune depends on the time of his death. Lord Peter is
asked to investigate.
- 1928 Lord Peter Views The Body Here we have a collection of
twelve short stories. By and large, I prefer Miss Sayers's novels to
her short stories, but some of the stories are good, and I know of
none that I begrudge the time reading.
- 1930 Strong Poison
The poet Philip Boyes is dead of arsenic.
Circumstances point to the detective novelist Harriet Vane, his
ex-lover, who has just rejected him, since it seems impossible that
he could have ingested the arsenic anywhere but at a brief meeting
with her. Lord Peter sees her at her trial, falls in love at first
sight, is convinced of her innocence, finds the real murderer, and
the book ends. Harriet (unlike the fair maiden whom the knight has
just rescued from the jaws of the dragon) is not prepared to fall
into his arms in a frenzy of love and gratitude, and their working
out of their personal relationships forms the sub-plot for some
subsequent books.
-
1931 Five Red Herrings
(or Suspicious Characters) Lord Peter is
vacationing in Scotland at Kirkcudbright, a haven for fishermen and
painters. A painter, the most unpopular man in town, is found
murdered, and six other painters are logical suspects. Five are red
herrings (i.e. distractions or misleading possibilities), and the
sixth is guilty. Kirkcudbright is a real locality (a favorite
vacation spot of the author), and the story conforms to local
geography.
-
1932 Have His Carcase
Harriet Vane, on holiday, is walking the
seacoast, takes a nap on the beach, and wakes to find herself near a
corpse with its throat cut and the blood still fresh, but no
murderer in sight. The plot is full of timetables and a cryptogram,
as Peter and Harriet work together to find the murderer, and in the
process explore their own feelings for one another.
-
1933 Hangman's Holiday
Here we have another collection of
short stories: four with Lord Peter Wimsey; six with another
detective, Montague Egg, a traveling salesman for a company selling
wines and spirits; and two other stories.
-
1933 Murder Must Advertise A copy-writer dies under curious
circumstances, and Lord Peter takes his job under an assumed name in
order to investigate. He is thrust into the unreal world of the drug
culture, and the differently but equally unreal world of
advertising, but manages to keep his head in both.
-
1934 The Nine Tailors
Lord Peter's auto breaks down in the fen
country of East Anglia, and he is offered the hospitality of the
local parsonage. He ends up helping to ring in the New Year with a
full peal on the 8 tower bells of the parish church, Fenchurch St
Paul's. Each bell was rung about 15000 times -- nine hours of
continuous ringing! (Change ringing, an old English tradition,
involves ringing bells in a mathematical pattern. See "change
ringing" in an encyclopedia.)
The year is that of the influenza epidemic, and the parish is
hit hard. At the death of anyone in the parish, the lowest (tenor)
bell tolls his passing. (The words "toll," "tail", and "tell" come
from the same root and have related meanings, referring either to a
narrative or to the numbering of something. Compare the similarly
ambiguous meanings of "count", "account", "recount", "number",
"score", etc.) First, nine strokes for a man or six for a woman
(hence the expression "Nine tailors make a man," which is often
misunderstood to mean something like "the apparel oft proclaims the
man"), then N rapid strokes for the age of the dead person, and then
single strokes at half-minute intervals for half an hour.
The corpse of a stranger is found hastily buried in the
churchyard, and Lord Peter is asked to identify the victim, and the
murderer. The background of the novel includes bellringing and
parish life in the fen country of East Anglia, where the author
herself spent her childhood as the daughter of a clergyman. This is
one of my favorites.
-
1935 Gaudy Night
The background for this novel is Oxford.
Harriet Vane returns to her old college for a reunion, and finds
that someone in the college is writing anonymous hate mail to
various residents, and committing acts of vandalism on a minor but
steadily escalating level. Harriet is asked to help identify the
perpetrator. The novel reflects Sayers's love of Oxford, and her
commitment to scholarship and the life of the intellect. Lord Peter
joins her part way through, and their presence in a place where
intellectual honesty is honored and valued helps Harriet to an
honest and unflinching look at herself and at Peter.
-
1937 Busman's Honeymoon
In this novel, Peter and Harriet are
married, go off to spend their honeymoon in a quiet cottage, and
find there the corpse of the previous occupant. The author
celebrates the glory of love between husband and wife, and explores
the notion of commitment to another person and what it implies. This
is the last of the Peter Wimsey novels, although a few short stories
follow.
-
1939 In The Teeth of The Evidence This is a collection of
short stories. My favorite is "Dilemma", which does not involve
Wimsey or Egg, and is not exactly a detective story.
That concludes the Peter Wimsey books and stories.
-
1930 The Documents in The Case
(with Robert Eustace). This
murder mystery is presented in the form of letters and other
documents written by members of a troubled family and a few persons
close to them. The novel explores personal relationships, and the
question of whether the phenonomenon of life is reducible to
chemical terms.
Plays:
-
1936 Busman's Honeymoon
(with Muriel St. Clare Byrne). This was
the original form of the novel of the same name described above. It
became a film starring Robert Montgomery and Constance Cummings.
Co-writing it seems to have interested Miss Sayers in the challenge
of writing plays.
-
1937 The Zeal of Thy House
Canterbury Cathedral commissioned a
play each year to be performed at the cathedral. (T.S.Eliot's Murder
in The Cathedral, a play about the martyrdom of Thomas a Becket, had
been a play in this series.) Miss Sayers wrote two plays for
Canterbury. The Zeal of Thy House deals with the architect who
rebuilt the central portion (the choir) of Canterbury Cathedral
after the fire of 1176. The play deals with pride of workmanship,
pride of possession, the creative imagination, the nature of the
creative act, the doctrine of the Incarnation, and the doctrine of
the Trinity. For a further discussion of the Trinity, see her
book The Mind of The Maker, listed below.
-
1939 The Devil to Pay
is Miss Sayers's second Canterbury play.
It retells the story of Doctor Faustus, who sold his soul to the
devil, and how God dealt with him at the last. The moral is: evil
cannot be undone, but only purged and redeemed.
-
1940 He That Should Come
This is a Nativity play, originally
for radio production, although it has been adapted for the stage.
While most Nativity plays take what may be called a devotional
approach, Sayers gives us the story of the birth of Jesus in (except
for a prologue and and epilogue) a straightforwardly naturalistic
setting, in the bustle of a crowded inn, where most of those present
have no idea that anything particularly significant is going on.
-
1942 The Man Born to Be King After the success of He That
Should Come, the BBC invited Miss Sayers to write a series of twelve
radio plays on the life of Jesus. She did so, and roused some
protests from those who thought it irreverent to make Biblical
characters speak ordinary (as opposed to King James) English, and in
general behave like real people. She replies that her point is
precisely that the Incarnation really happened -- that God took
human nature upon him, and lived as a real man surrounded by real
people who spoke the ordinary language of their day. Each of the
twelve plays is preceded by Sayers's comments, often dealing with the
historical background of the incidents, and the theological issues
raised by them. These are, in my judgement, outstandingly insightful
and thought-provoking.
-
1946 The Just Vengeance
This play was commissioned for the
750th anniversary of Lichfield Cathedral. It is a play about the
Atonement, not in the sense of being a Passion Play, but in that it
discusses the theology of the Atonement, borrowing heavily from the
ideas of Dante.
-
1951 The Emperor Constantine
This pageant was commissioned to
celebrate the 2000'th anniversary of the city of Colchester, the
presumed birthplace of Helena, the mother of the Emperor
Constantine. It covers Constantine's rise to power, his conversion
to Christianity, the Council of Nicea, Constantine's family
troubles, and the end of his life. It deals in dramatic form with
the theological issues of Nicea (whether Jesus was truly God or just
a very important agent of God). As a play, with battle scenes, and
council scenes, it can, if desired, be performed with "a cast of
thousands", and presumably enabled anyone in Colchester who wanted
to be in the pageant an opportunity to carry a spear. All in all, it
is good history, and good theology, and a thoughtful discussion of
the dilemmas facing a Christian in a position of power.
Non-Fiction:
-
1941 The Mind of The Maker
In this seminal work, Sayers
discusses the psychology of the creative mind at work in producing a
novel or sculpture or other work, as an aid to understanding the
theological doctrine of the Trinity, and the latter as an aid to
understanding the former. For a brief, inadequate, summary of her
thesis, send the three-word message
GET TRINITY ANALOGY
to the
address
LISTSERV@ASUVM.INRE.ASU.EDU
But it is better to read the
book itself.
-
1946 Unpopular Opinions: Twenty-One Essays
Here we have
provocative essays on theology, literature, and other subjects. It
is now, unfortunately, out of print, but worth searching for. Many
of the essays were subsequently reprinted in a collection called The
Whimsical Christian (see below).
-
1971 Are Women Human?
This is a small book consisting of just
two essays, reprinted from the preceding work. The publisher is
Eerdmans. The essays take a very different tack from that of most
feminist tracts, and Sayers herself explicitly dissociates herself
from "feminism," but I have known several feminists to say, "This is
the work that really succeeds in saying what feminism is all about.
This puts into words what I have been trying to formulate for
years." Sayers begins by quoting a writer's observation that bus
seats on the side next the curb are always filled first, "because
men find them more comfortable on account of the slant of the
roadbed, and women find that they can get a better view of the
shop-windows." She notes that men are given a "human" reason for
their preference, while women are given a "female" reason for
theirs. She argues that every human ought to be accepted first as a
person in his/her own right, with sex considered only when relevant.
She does not say that it is never relevant, or that there can never
be any rational disagreement about when it is relevant. She does
deny the frequent assumption that when one is considering a woman it
is always relevant.
-
1947 Creed or Chaos A collection of seven essays. All but the
second and sixth are also found in The Whimsical Christian, listed
below. There is considerable overlap among the essays (originally
published separately).
- "The Greatest Drama Ever Staged."
- "The Triumph Of Easter."
- "The Dogma Is The Drama."
- "Creed Or Chaos."
- "Strong Meat."
- "Why Work?"
- "The Other Six Deadly Sins."
Perhaps most notable is the 1938 essay, "The Dogma is the Drama," in
which she states that Christian dogma is often thought dull because
people have no idea what it affirms. If they understood the
teachings found in the Creeds, they might eagerly embrace them, or
indignantly reject them as too far-fetched to be considered, or
wistfully reject them as too good to be true, but they would not be
bored. (She gives a satirical account of what the average moderately
educated non-Christian thinks that the Church teaches.)
-
1954 Introductory Papers on Dante The title explains the
contents. I add only that they are marvelous papers, a superb
exposition of Dante as poet, theologian, and lover, by a first-rate
scholar who knows what she is talking about.
-
1957 Further Papers on Dante More of the same.
-
1963 The Poetry of Search and The Poetry of Statement
(Gollanz). This I had not heard of until a few weeks ago (Dec 1995),
when I saw a copy in a private library. I had not, alas, the
opportunity to do more than glance at it. The title essay concerns
poets who ask, "What is the meaning of life?" and poets who
proclaim, "This is the meaning of life!" and critics who wish to
exclude one class or the other from the ranks of true poets. Another
essay concerns the Vision of Glory, the fading of the Vision, and
the return of the Vision, as seen in Wordsworth, Dante, and other
poets.
-
1987 The Whimsical Christian. This is a collection (made after
her death) of 18 of her essays, mostly reprinted from earlier
collections. It was earlier published as Christian Letters to a
Post-Christian World. The present title marks it as part of a series
of books containing short selections from various Christian authors,
such as:
- The Joyful Christian (C.S. Lewis)
- The Visionary Chrisian (more C.S. Lewis)
- The Martyred Christian (Dietrich Bonhoeffer)
- The Newborn Christian (J B Phillips).
The essays in The Whimsical Christian include the following:
- "Selections from the Pantheon Papers." A parody written for
PUNCH.
- "The Greatest Drama Ever Staged." On the Incarnation.
- "Strong Meat."
- "The Dogma is the Drama." Most non-Christians, and most
Christians, do not realize how exciting the official Christian creed
really is.
- "What Do We Believe?"
- "Creed or Chaos?"
- "A Vote of Thanks to Cyrus." Sayers remembers realizing as a
child that the Cyrus mentioned in the Bible is the same Cyrus found
in her history books, and that the Bible is about things that
actually happened in this world, not a tale off in some other
dimension. (Along the same lines, a teacher in the New York schools
reports the electric effect on his students when he was telling them
how the early American settlers sailed across the Atlantic, and then
pointed out to them that the Atlantic was the same body of salt
water that they could see from the harbor a short distance away. It
had never occurred to most of them that there was any connection
between their history books and reality.)
- "The Dates in The Red-Headed League." This is one of many
essays, in a tradition begun by Ronald Knox, analyzing the Sherlock
Holmes stories using the techniques applied by many scholars to the
analysis of the Scriptures.
- "Toward a Christian Esthetic."
- "Creative Mind."
- "The Image of God."
- "Problem Picture."
- "Christian Morality."
- "The Other Six Deadly Sins." The traditional list of Seven
Capital Sins, reading from most serious to least serious, is: Pride,
Envy, Anger, Sloth, Avarice, Gluttony, and Lust. However, many
persons have gotten the impression that the Church is concerned only
with the last of these. Sayers undertakes to remind her readers of
the other six.
- "Dante and Charles Williams." Charles Williams, poet, novelist,
critic, historian, theologian, and mystic of the Affirmative Way,
first got Sayers interested in Dante. She here writes about
Williams's interpretation of Dante.
- "The Writing and Reading of Allegory."
- "Oedipus Simplex: Freedom and Fate in Folklore and Fiction."
- "The Faust Legend and the Idea of the Devil."
Translations:
-
1929 Tristan in Brittany, from Old French.
-
1957 The Song of Roland, from Old French.
This is the story of
Charlemagne's invasion of Spain and his battles against the
Saracens, and in particular of how his elite guard, headed by his
nephew Roland, was killed in battle as the result of treachery, and
how Charlemagne avenged their deaths. It is an epic poem about the
struggle between Christians and their pagan enemies. It is
historically inaccurate, and inaccurate in its portrayal of Islamic
theology (errors by the original medieval poet, not by Sayers), but
sound in its treatment of Christian issues.
-
1949, 1957, 1962 The (Divine) Comedy of Dante Alighieri.
This
translation from the Italian of one of the world's greatest works of
literature and of theology is far and away my favorite English
version of Dante. Even those who prefer another translation (or who
read the poem in Italian) will find the notes invaluable. For
details, see the biographical sketch of Dante, listed at 15
September.
Dorothy L. Sayers died 17 December 1957, leaving her translation of
the Comedy unfinished. The last thirteen cantos and the notes and
commentary to the Paradiso were supplied by her friend and fellow
Dante scholar, Dr. Barbara Reynolds.
Books about Dorothy L. Sayers include the following:
-
A Bibliography of The Works of Dorothy L. Sayers, by Colleen B.
Gilbert (MacMillan, NY, 1978).
-
An Annotated Guide to The Works of Dorothy L. Sayers, by Robert B.
Harmon and Margaret A Burger (Garland Publishing, NY, 1977).
-
Dorothy L. Sayers: The Life of a Courageous Woman, by James
Brabazon (Gollanz, 1981). The first "authorized" biography, with the
co-operation of her literary heirs and her publisher.
-
Maker and Craftsman: The Story of Dorothy L. Sayers, by Alzina
Stone Dale (Harold Shaw Publishers, Wheaton, 1992, ISBN
0-87788-523-0, pb $12, 158p). Has two-page bibliography, with a list
of DLS's works and a selected list of works about her.
-
Dorothy L. Sayers: The Centenary Celebration (Walker &Co, New
York, 1993, ISBN 0-8027-3224-0, hb $19, 166pp), ed. Alzina Stone
Dale. This is a collection of essays by various writers about
various aspects of the work of DLS, prepared for the centennial of
her birth.
-
Dorothy L. Sayers, Spiritual Writings, selected by Ann Loades
(Cowley Publications, Boston, 1993, ISBN 1-56101-066-9, $14 pb,
184pp). A set of extracts from the writings of DLS.
-
Dorothy L. Sayers, Her Life and Soul: A Biography, by Barbara
Reynolds (Hodder and Stoughton, London; St Martin's Press, New York,
1993, ISBN 0-312-09787-5 hb $13, 398pp). The author is a Dante
scholar who supplied the last 13 cantos for the translation of
Dante's Comedy which DLS left unfinished at her death. She had known
DLS for many years and discussed her work and her ideas with her in
depth.
-
The Passionate Intellect: Dorothy L. Sayers's Encounter With
Dante, by Barbara Reynolds (Kent State U Pr, 1989). See the
preceding entry.
-
The Remarkable Case of Dorothy L. Sayers, by Catherine Kenney
(Kent State U Pr, Kent (Ohio) and London, 1990, ISBN 0-87338-410-5
(hb) and 0-87338-458-X (pb), $16.50 pb, 309pp.) This work offers a
careful analysis of Sayer's writings and ideas.
Prayer (traditional language)
O Almighty God, who didst give to thy servant Dorothy L Sayers
special gifts of grace to understand and teach the truth as it
is in Christ Jesus: Grant, we beseech thee, that by this
teaching we may know thee, the one true God, and Jesus Christ
whom thou hast sent; who liveth and reigneth with thee and the
Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.
Prayer (contemporary language)
Almighty God, who gave to your servant Dorothy L Sayers special
gifts of grace to understand and teach the truth as it is in
Christ Jesus: Grant that by this teaching we may know you, the
one true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent; who lives
and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and
ever.