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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">23.03.16</article-id>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>23.03.16, Bale, Margery Kempe: A Mixed Life</article-title>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Julie A. Chappell</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                    <aff>Professor of English, retired</aff>
                    <address>
                        <email>julieannchappell@gmail.com</email>
                    </address>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2022">
                <year>2023</year>
            </pub-date>
            <product product-type="book">
                <person-group>
                    <name>
                        <surname>Bale, Anthony</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                </person-group>
                <source>Margery Kempe: A Mixed Life</source>
                <series>Medieval Lives</series>
                <year iso-8601-date="2021">2021</year>
                <publisher-loc>London</publisher-loc>
                <publisher-name>Reaktion Books</publisher-name>
                <page-range>Pp. 256</page-range>
                <price>$22.50 (hardback)</price>
                <isbn>978-1-78914-470-3 (hardback)</isbn>
            </product>
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Copyright 2023 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
            </permissions>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <p>In <italic>Margery Kempe: A Mixed Life</italic>, Anthony Bale elucidates the intricacies
            of Margery Kempe’s palimpsestic life. In lucid prose, Bale details Kempe’s spiritual
            refashioning as she attempts to gain control over her own life. By doing so, Bale fully
            achieves his purpose, to create an “analytical biography” of a profoundly unique
            medieval woman as it is revealed in <italic>The Book of Margery Kempe</italic> (10).
            Anthony Bale accomplishes this in eight chapters and three “interloges” with particular
            focus on the stages of Margery Kempe’s physical and spiritual transformations
            transpiring through a late medieval world unprepared for such a woman.</p>
      
        <p>His brief “Foreword: A Note on this Book,” explores autobiography and <italic>The Book of
                Margery Kempe,</italic> which he asserts “is a book about the writing of a book and
            about the making of a testament” (11).</p>
        
        <p>In Chapter One, “Creature,” Bale examines the mental and physical struggles of the young
            married Kempe, tormented not only by a difficult pregnancy and birth, but by her
            conscience for an unconfessed sin. Bale argues that her household’s attempts to stifle
            her postpartum verbal and physical abuse of self and others reflects “the standard
            treatment for someone who has gone out of her mind” (16) and notes the medieval terms
            for possible diagnoses of Kempe’s condition. After more than eight months of trauma,
            Margery Kempe is restored to both mental and, ultimately, physical health through a
            vision of the beatific and beautiful Jesus Christ. Bale deems this her first
            transformation. His analysis in this chapter establishes the who, what, where, and why
            of Margery Kempe’s pursuit of a “mixed life” (22).</p>
        
        <p>Chapter Two, “The Town of Bishop’s Lynn,” is “where Kempe’s story begins, returns to and
            ends” (25). Bale demonstrates the ways in which this place nurtured Margery Kempe in the
            mercantile life of her family, the Burnhams, and the town of Lynn. This mercantile womb
            that nurtured Kempe manifests itself in many of Margery’s secular and spiritual
            ventures. Bale notes that marriage into another merchant family solidifies her sense of
            her “elite” status in this town even in the face of her husband’s less-than-stellar
            career, demonstrating how Kempe, striving to balance the secular and the sacred in her
            life, echoes a not dissimilar tension existing in the town of Bishop’s Lynn itself.
            Kempe’s pride of place (the town and her position in it) will burden her throughout her
            life. As Bale asserts, it is “her spirituality and outspokenness sitting awkwardly with
            her elite, mercantile and materialistic background” that often confounds her (31) as she
            attempts “to negotiate sacred <italic>and</italic> worldly categories of judgement and
            esteem in order to establish a lasting reputation, on earth and in heaven” (36).</p>
        
        <p>In Chapter Three, “Places,” Bale explores the foundation of Kempe’s religious development
            in Norwich, a place of “‘religious energy and creativity’” (47). Among the inhabitants
            of this city are anchorites and Lollards, extremes of religious devotion and reform,
            affecting Kempe in various ways. Bale’s analysis of Kempe’s relationship with Richard
            Caister and his church in Norwich reveals how the man and the place become significant
            factors in Kempe’s spiritual journey. From Norwich, Bale takes us to Lambeth, where two
            incidents “bookend Kempe’s story” (52). In the Archbishop of Canterbury Thomas Arundel’s
            Lambeth palace, Kempe remonstrates with the people waiting in the hall and is threatened
            with burning by a woman there. Bale sees in this the source of the persistent threat of
            Kempe’s being burned that continues throughout her <italic>Book</italic>. Bale
            deconstructs each stop of Kempe’s subsequent pilgrimage from Constance to Rome,
            concluding that Rome is “an interlude in Kempe’s travels” and “a distinct and
            transformative moment” (82).</p>
        
        <p>In the “Interloge: ‘my weddyd wife’, Rome, 1414,” Kempe solemnizes her mystical marriage
            to the Godhead at the church of Santi Apostoli, “becoming a holy spouse akin to Bridget”
            (82). Bale argues for the significance of the church where Kempe’s idiosyncratic take on
            the standard marriage vows occurs. The Godhead vows and pledges fidelity without Kempe
            offering a corresponding response. Bale asserts that this “ceremony boldly authorizes
            Kempe as the heir and imitator of other mystical brides” (84) and finds this mystical
            union key to Kempe’s claim to be special in God’s eyes.</p>
        
        <p>Chapter Four, “Friends and Enemies,” probes the nature of Margery Kempe’s supporters and
            detractors. Bale argues that unlike Richard Rolle’s equitable model of friendship,
            Kempe’s friendships are “transient, hierarchical and contingent on money, patronage or
            circumstance” (86), indicating the serendipitous ways Kempe’s supporters appear amidst a
            sea of detractors. Bale reinforces his assertions by closely examining the vital
            relationships and interactions that Kempe has with notable supporters, such as the
            anchoress, Julian of Norwich, whom he finds “unique as a woman in the
                <italic>Book</italic> in taking on a quasi-clerical role, of spiritual teaching and
            opining on the discernment of spirits” (91). He locates Kempe’s mystical roots in her
            similarities with St. Bridget of Sweden, Kempe’s obvious model of sanctity. Detractors
            are many and varied but include the powerful and dangerous heresy hunter, the Duke of
            Bedford, as well as the one to whom women were purportedly most susceptible, “her main
            enemy…the Devil” (113).</p>
        
        <p>The second Interloge, “‘fals strumpet’, Leicester, 1417,” lays bare Kempe’s disastrous
            trip to Leicester after her remarkable pilgrimages to Rome, Jerusalem, and Santiago de
            Compostela. As Bale points out that “Kempe had survived [these journeys] and proved
            herself as a pilgrim.” Unfortunately, Kempe’s public display of the “fire of love” in
            Leicester is a “transfer from internal spiritual excitement to external social
            controversy,” which is “one of Kempe’s most established moves” (121). Bale claims that
            the Leicester innkeeper’s violent actions in taking Kempe’s purse from her after he
            “bursts” in on her in her private room, makes a criminal of Kempe (122). It also proves
            how dependent Kempe’s religious motivations and consequent movements are upon worldly
            wealth and male authority. In her room, she is a woman alone, with no man present to
            step up in her defense. Consequently, as we’ve come to expect, she defends herself. Her
            courage in the face of powerful men’s blatantly sexist acts, accusations, and threats in
            Leicester joins with her fearless acceptance of “the prison cell as the exemplary place
            for the reception of self-growth and God’s grace” (125), reinforcing her spiritual
            superiority. Bale argues that this episode genders her ordeal in Leicester where she
            stands “at the poles of misogyny” (127), proving this incident and her survival of it an
            affirmation of Kempe’s insistence on her holiness.</p>
        
        <p>In Chapter Five, “Things,” Bale probes the conflicts that arise for Kempe when worldly
            and mystical vision coalesce in material objects. A priest’s spectacles, a doll
            venerated by a group of women, images of the <italic>pietà</italic>, Kempe’s “maryd
            ring,” her clothing, the stockfish, and dust motes supply the materials for Margery
            Kempe to demonstrate her sanctity among the various people she encounters. The last
            material object, the “motys in the sunne” that Kempe sees, Bale declares to be an
            “eloquent motif for the circularity and endurance of the physical world, and the
            spiritual comfort Kempe derives from her material yet mystical encounters with this
            world” (153).</p>
        
        <p>“Interloge: ‘a gret fyer’, Lynn, 1421” Bale’s final interlude, returns us to Kempe’s
            hometown, and, perhaps, more importantly, to the metaphorical and real concept of fire
            that runs throughout <italic>The Book of Margery Kempe</italic>. Although fire was
            essential for warming houses, lighting, cooking food, brewing ale, etc., the spread of
            an uncontrolled fire was much feared in a time when construction was primarily in
            combustible materials--wood, pitch, thatch--with water supplies often inadequate or far
            from town or village. According to Bale, the fire in Lynn made Margery Kempe “central to
            what happens next, as she assumes the role of a divine” (154). He asserts that the
            transformation of Margery Kempe is incomplete unless she can bolster her reputation in
            her hometown by becoming its salvation in the face of a potentially devastating fire.
            Since this historical fire began in the Trinity Guildhall, a signifier of Kempe’s
            mercantile roots, it is the perfect setting for the secular and the sacred Kempe to
            merge. Kempe’s prayers for God to “qwenchyn this fyer” seem to be answered when snow
            starts to fall, saving the town and, significantly, Kempe’s own church, St. Margaret’s
            (155). As Bale contends, Margery Kempe becomes “a seer of Lynn” and “both exemplar and
            protectress of the community…centred on her beloved church” (157).</p>
        
        <p>In Chapter Six, “Feelings,” Bale examines Margery Kempe’s feelings, her joy, crying,
            pain, and shame. He deconstructs these symbols of Kempe’s affective piety according to
            medieval and modern conceptualizations. As Barbara Zimbalist has argued, “the most
            well-known mode of this new spirituality [affective piety]...was the corporeal
            affectivity that developed within medieval women’s piety” which Margery Kempe effected
            to good and ill ends. [1] When Kempe nearly falls off her mule at her first view of
            Jerusalem from Mount Joy, internally, she understands this as her spiritual experience
            of pious joy. The other pilgrims with her, the external perspective, see her reaction as
            a symptom of physical illness. Bale understands this moment as “a microcosm of that
            disjunction, characteristic of her mixed life,” between Kempe’s perception of her
            relationship with God versus that of other people” (159). Although her affective piety
            is well reported in her <italic>Book</italic>, Bale posits that in Jerusalem Kempe’s
            first “divinely inspired bout of tears...is transformative” (163). This holy place bears
            witness to Kempe’s external and internal expressions of devotion to Christ’s humanity,
            “to experience God through <italic>feeling</italic> the scripture.” [2] </p>
        
        <p>With Chapter Seven “Old Age,” Bale conjectures that the lacunae in Kempe’s
                <italic>Book</italic> for the late 1420s, when a number of people, undoubtedly known
            to Margery Kempe, were fined or burned for heresy, may be created to shed light on
            Margery Kempe’s success in avoiding the flames even as she is repeatedly threatened with
            burning. Yet, the primary focus is on end-of-life matters including the
                <italic>Book’s</italic> early account of “the burden of a wife caring for a person
            with something like...dementia” (184). After 1431, Kempe’s chaste living in being
            distant from her husband is compromised by her husband’s suffering a near fatal injury.
            God himself tells Margery to return to her husband and care for him. Under Margery’s
            God-given care, John Kempe lives many more years. Before he dies, their son, John, Jr.,
            visits and dies within a month. Bale notes that John Jr.’s being chastised and suffering
            for his “attachment to worldly goods” parallels his mother’s (186). After the loss of
            son and husband, Kempe travels again in spite of her age and against the advice of her
            spiritual guides. But Bale finds that, as in her younger days, Kempe manages to garner
            supporters along her journey through Gdansk, Stralsund, Wilsnack, Aachen, Calais, London
            and, finally, home to Lynn. The ending of Kempe’s <italic>Book</italic> steps out of the
            narrative of her life and into her cherished position “as an intercessor on behalf of
            the Christian community,” a holy woman praying for all (191).</p>
        
        <p>In Chapter Eight, “Writing and Rediscovery,” Bale reiterates the difficulties involved in
            the writing of Kempe’s <italic>Book</italic> and its uniqueness among medieval books.
            Bale places Kempe and her <italic>Book</italic> in context with the anonymous,
            woman-authored <italic>Revelation of Purgatory</italic> and Elizabeth Hull’s commentary
            on the Psalms, similar but distinct works. Bale also reviews the physical description of
            the unique manuscript of <italic>The Book of Margery Kempe</italic> along with the
            circumstances of its preservation by the Carthusians of Mount Grace Priory and their own
            annotations on the text. Primarily, Bale urges us to understand Kempe’s
                <italic>Book</italic> “as a collaborative document, in which individual experience
            merges with the imprimatur of confessors and scribes” (196). The two short printed works
            of Wynkyn de Worde (c. 1501) and Henry Pepwell (1521) are “much less experimental
            account[s] of mystical conversation and prayer” and thus “undoubtedly more marketable”
            (197). The twentieth-century rediscovery of the manuscript of Kempe’s
                <italic>Book</italic> is “a story of chance, disorder and layered histories” (200)
            with a significant afterlife in editions, translations, novels, and the emergence of
            Margery Kempe into the digital age.</p>
        
        <p>“Envoie” takes us to a little church in the village of Mintlyn outside of Lynn, where the
            authenticity of Kempe’s “plentyuows terys and boystows sobbyngs” were tested by two
            priests. As always, Margery Kempe passes the test with ease. Subsequently, Bale reflects
            on his own journey to the now-neglected ruins of Mintlyn, describing its once vibrant
            religious culture before the plague and the Reformation accelerated its demise. Bale
            concludes that <italic>The Book of Margery Kempe</italic>, like the remnants of the
            village, “helps us vividly to conjure some parts of a life.” For Margery Kempe that
            turned out to be “a bold self-definition of one’s own life as holy” (209).</p>
        
        <p>Anthony Bale’s <italic>Margery Kempe: A Mixed Life</italic> provides an essential
            resource across a wide range of disciplines and interests and should be read by
            academics and non-academics alike. With this book, he achieves a trifecta of medieval
            scholarship that includes his earlier exemplary translation of <italic>The Book of
                Margery Kempe</italic> (Oxford UP, 2015) and the more recent collection of primary
            and secondary works edited with Sebastian Sobecki, <italic>Medieval English Travel: A
                Critical Anthology</italic> (Oxford UP, 2021). </p>
        
        <p>--------</p>
        <p>Notes:</p>
       
        <p>1. Barbara Zimbalist, “Medieval Affective Piety and Christological Devotion: Juliana of
            Mont Cornillon and the Feast of Corpus Christi," in <italic>Illuminating Jesus in the
                Middle Ages</italic>, ed. Jane Beal (Leiden: Brill, 2019), 203-218, 203.</p>
        
        <p>2. Jean Leclercq, <italic>The Love of Learning and the Desire for God</italic> (New York:
            Fordham University Press, 1982), 6-7.</p>
    </body>
</article>
