Joan la Pucelle merits a choice phrase in Henry VI, Part 1: “By fair persuasions mixed with sugared words . . .” We might say “sweet talk,” candy-coating lies to seduce the credulous. The alternative is making lies sour and unpleasant, and that sometimes works too. Sweetness is probably preferable. Children have a sweet tooth.
The adjective sugared (usually spelled sug’red) was a favorite of George Herbert, that wittiest of poets. In “Dullness” he pleads with God to “give me quickness, that I may with mirth / Praise thee brim-full!” But the poet is dull: “Where are my lines? my approaches? my views?” He is weak: “But I am lost in flesh, whose sug’red lies / Still mock me and grow bold.” Like Philip Larkin, Herbert is a master of unexpected yet memorably appropriate words, adjectives in particular. Here he is in the opening stanza of “The Rose”:
“Press me
not to take more pleasure
In this world of sug’red lies,
And to use a
larger measure
Then my strict, yet welcome size.”
Sugared here suggests not only fraudulent but full of
temptation, an inducement to sin. In “The Glance” it takes on a more positive
sense. When God first noticed the poet in his youth, “I felt a sug’red strange
delight, / Passing all cordials made by any art, / Bedew, embalme, and
overrunne my heart, / And take it in.” That’s Herbert’s use of sugared that gives this reader the most
pleasure: “a sug’red strange delight.”
Herbert was
born on this date, April 3, in 1593.
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