The doomed Duke of Gloucester, Henry VI’s uncle and Lord Protector of England, is a rare sympathetic presence in the history plays. In Henry VI, Part 2, despite his unearned disgrace and death, Gloucester defends his sense of mercy:
“Pity was
all the fault that was in me;
For I should
melt at an offender’s tears,
And lowly
words were ransom for their fault.
Unless it
were a bloody murderer,
Or foul
felonious thief that fleec’d poor passengers,
I never gave
them condign punishment.”
This comes in
Act III, Scene 1. In the next scene he has already been murdered by order of
the Duke of Suffolk. His death illustrates what happens when justice is not condign.
That’s the
word that captured my attention. In the fifteenth century it meant “worthily
deserved, merited, fitting, appropriate; adequate,” the OED tells us. By Shakespeare’s time it was “commonly used
only of appropriate punishment: a use originating in the phraseology of Tudor
Acts of Parliament.” In his Dictionary,
Dr. Johnson defines it as “worthy of a person; suitable; deserved; merited: it
is always used of something deserved by crimes,” and cites Gloucester’s speech.
Does anyone know if the word has any standing today in law?
I found it
again in the last poem in Turner Cassity’s No
Second Eden: Poems (2002, Swallow Press/Ohio University Press), “The
Grateful Minimalist”:
“Aghast
A past
Condign
As mine
Could, bit
By bit,
Escape,
I trap
Its time
In rhyme:
The hits,
The pits;
Some one
On one
Contacts;
My acts
Of spite
I quite
Regret
(And yet
Would score
Once more).
Few works;
Some quirks.
No blanks,
Just thanks.”
The final
couplet reminded me of a line from W.H. Auden’s 1969 poem “Lullaby”: “Let your
last thinks all be thanks.” Then I wondered if Auden, a fancier of outré words,
had ever used “condign.” Sure enough, in “The Art of Healing,” another poem
from 1969, he writes: “Dear David, / dead one, rest in peace, / having been
what all / doctors should be, but few are, / and, even when most / difficult,
condign / of our biassed affection / and objective praise.”
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