At least 30,00
were to die from the bubonic plague that year in England, including a quarter
of London’s population. Among them was seven-year-old Ben Jonson, the
playwright’s namesake, his first-born son. His father was away from home at the
time, at the estate of Sir Robert Cotton in Huntingtonshire. In the book quoted
above, Ben Jonson: A Life (Oxford University Press, 2011), Ian Donaldson
writes:
“Years later
Jonson told William Drummond that he had had a premonition of the boy’s death,
seeing one night ‘in a vision his eldest son, then a child and at London,
appear unto him with the mark of a bloody cross on his forehead, as if it had
been cutted with a sword.'”
Donaldson
reports that a red cross had previously been regarded as a talisman against the
plague but by Jonson’s day the symbolism had changed, and the mark was painted
on the doors of houses whose inhabitants were dead or dying of the plague.
Jonson was shaken by the dream, a disturbance that reveals, Donaldson says, “a
dimension of his character that is not always evident in his own (typically
more rational and more skeptical) creative work: a fascination with the
coincidental, the inexplicable, the supernatural.” Out of his grief Jonson
crafted one of the greatest poems in the language, “On My First Son”:
“Farewell,
thou child of my right hand, and joy;
My
sin was too much hope of thee, lov'd boy.
Seven years
tho’ wert lent to me, and I thee pay,
Exacted
by thy fate, on the just day.
O, could I
lose all father now! For why
Will
man lament the state he should envy?
To have so
soon ’scap’d world’s and flesh’s rage,
And
if no other misery, yet age?
Rest in soft
peace, and, ask’d, say, ‘Here doth lie
Ben
Jonson his best piece of poetry.’
For whose
sake henceforth all his vows be such,
As
what he loves may never like too much.”
A child is
lent to his parents. Now the debt must be repaid. Donaldson hears an echo of
the opening verses of Deuteronomy 15. The poem waivers between stoical acceptance
and crushing emotion. A child’s death is unthinkable and impossible to ignore.
I read the final
four lines as an epitaph within Jonson’s epigram.
Another of his
sons, Joseph, born in 1599, is presumed to have died young. The records are nonexistent.
At the time, the names of children who died were often given to the couple’s subsequent
offspring. Donaldson finds evidence that another Benjamin was born to Anne and
Ben Jonson in February 1608. “The life of this boy, too, may have been brief,
but the burial of ‘Benjamin Johnson [sic] sonne to Benjamin’ is recorded
at [St. Anne’s, Blackfriars] on 18 November 1611.”
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