Happy those early days, when I
Shined in my Angel-infancy!
Before I understood this place
Appointed for my second race,
explain it
Answers
Explanation:
In summary, ‘The Retreat’ focuses on the double meaning of that word, ‘retreat’: both a place of refuge and the act of withdrawal. Childhood is viewed by Vaughan as a happy place, a world of innocence and bliss which the adult Vaughan has lost sight of. Vaughan talks of his mortal life as his ‘second race’, suggesting that our life on Earth follow on from a previous, heavenly existence which we enjoyed before our birth. In those early days of his life, Vaughan found it easy to fill his soul with ‘a white, celestial thought’: indeed, such heavenly thoughts were the only ones he was capable of having. Vaughan talks of Christ as his ‘first love’. Vaughan says that he longs to travel back to those childhood years when he felt closer to God – in this respect, ‘The Retreat’ anticipates a nineteenth-century Romantic poem like Thomas Hood’s ‘I Remember, I Remember’, especially its concluding lines (where Hood remarks that in adulthood he is farther off from heaven than when he was a boy).
Throughout ‘The Retreat’, Henry Vaughan refers to our (short) time on Earth, contrasting it with the eternity of heaven:
When on some gilded cloud or flower
My gazing soul would dwell an hour,
And in those weaker glories spy
Some shadows of eternity;
Before I taught my tongue to wound
My conscience with a sinful sound,
Or had the black art to dispense
A several sin to every sense,
But felt through all this fleshly dress
Bright shoots of everlastingness.
In rhyming ‘flower’ with ‘hour’, Vaughan reminds us that everything has its moment in the sun and then withers and dies, like a flower. Our childhood is but an hour; our lives scarcely longer. Yet the couplet that follows, crowned with ‘eternity’ as it is, reminds us that, for Vaughan at least, there is something much vaster in the world – or rather, beyond the world. Before he had grown a bit older and started sinning, Vaughan tells us, he felt the bright shoots of ‘everlastingness’. These ‘bright shoots’ are to be contrasted with the flower we encountered a few lines before: these shoots will not wither away and die.
Vaughan concludes ‘The Retreat’ by saying that, whereas many people prefer to think in terms of progress, looking forward to the future, he prefers to look back to this earlier time when he was in touch with heaven and glimpsed the eternity of the afterlife (and, indeed, what we might call the beforelife). Vaughan then ends by saying that, if he looks forward to anything, it is to returning to the dust of which he was constituted before his birth – a reference to the biblical image of man being made from dust, to which he is returned when he dies. (This is most familiar to us these days through the Burial of the Dead from the Book of Common Prayer: ‘Ashes to ashes, dust to dust’.)
Henry Vaughan acknowledged the earlier devotional poet George Herbert (1593-1633) as an important influence on his own work, writing that Herbert’s ‘holy life and verse gained many pious Converts (of whom I am the least).’ Herbert and Vaughan are both associated with the Metaphysical Poets, who use extended metaphors to explore complex psychological, philosophical, and religious ideas. But there is also a delicate and careful deployment of language in ‘The Retreat’: look at how ‘fancy’ (line 5) softly picks up on ‘infancy’ from three lines earlier, suggesting the light and carefree time of fancy that is our infancy.