Evelyn Underhill (6 December 1875 – 15 June 1941) was an English Anglo-Catholic writer and pacifist known for her numerous works on religion and spiritual practice, in particular Christian mysticism. Her best-known work is Mysticism, published in 1911.
Life
Underhill was born in Wolverhampton. She was a poet and novelist as well as a pacifist and mystic. An only child, she described her early mystical insights as "abrupt experiences of the peaceful, undifferentiated plane of reality—like the 'still desert' of the mystic—in which there was no multiplicity nor need of explanation". The meaning of these experiences became a lifelong quest and a source of private angst, provoking her to research and write.
As an only child, she was devoted to her parents and, later, to her husband. She was fully engaged in the life of a barrister's daughter and wife, including the entertainment and charitable work that entailed, and pursued a daily regimen that included writing, research, worship, prayer and meditation. It was a fundamental axiom of hers that all of life was sacred, as that was what "incarnation" was about.
She was a cousin of Francis Underhill, Bishop of Bath and Wells.
Both her father, Arthur Underhill, and her husband, Hubert Stuart Moore, were writers (on the law), London barristers, and yachtsmen. She and her husband grew up together and were married on 3 July 1907. The couple had no children. She traveled regularly within Europe, primarily to Switzerland, France and Italy, where she pursued her interests in art and Catholicism, visiting numerous churches and monasteries. Neither her husband (a Protestant) nor her parents shared her interest in spiritual matters.
Moore was a prolific author who published over 30 books either under her maiden name, Underhill, or under the pseudonym "John Cordelier", such as the 1912 book The Spiral Way. Initially an agnostic, she gradually began to acquire an interest in Neoplatonism and from there was increasingly drawn to Catholicism against the objections of her husband. She eventually became a prominent Anglo-Catholic. From 1921 to 1924, her spiritual mentor was Baron Friedrich von Hügel, who appreciated her writing yet concerned with her focus on mysticism and who encouraged her to adopt a much more Christocentric view as opposed to the theistic and intellectual one she had previously held. She described him as "the most wonderful personality. ... so saintly, truthful, sane and tolerant" (Cropper, p. 44) and was influenced by him toward more charitable and down-to-earth activities. After his death in 1925, her writings became more focused on the Holy Spirit and she became prominent in the Anglican Church as a lay leader of spiritual retreats, a spiritual director for hundreds of individuals, guest speaker, radio lecturer and proponent of contemplative prayer.
Underhill came of age in the Edwardian era and, like many contemporaries, had a decided romantic bent with interests in the psychic, the psychological, the occult, the mystical, the medieval, the advance of science, the apotheosis of art, the rediscovery of the feminine, the unashamedly sensuous, and the most ethereally "spiritual".</blockquote>
The Lost Word and The Column of Dust are also concerned with the problem of living in two worlds and reflect the writer's own spiritual challenges. In the 1909 novel, her heroine encounters a rift in the solid stuff of her universe:
<blockquote>She had seen, abruptly, the insecurity of those defences which protect our illusions and ward off the horrors of truth. She had found a little hole in the wall of appearances; and peeping through, had caught a glimpse of that seething pot of spiritual forces whence, now and then, a bubble rises to the surface of things.</blockquote>
Underhill's novels suggest that perhaps for the mystic, two worlds may be better than one. For her, mystical experience seems inseparable from some kind of enhancement of consciousness or expansion of perceptual and aesthetic horizons—to see things as they are, in their meanness and insignificance when viewed in opposition to the divine reality, but in their luminosity and grandeur when seen bathed in divine radiance. But at this stage the mystic's mind is subject to fear and insecurity, its powers undeveloped. The first novel takes us only to this point. Further stages demand suffering, because mysticism is more than merely vision or cultivating a latent potentiality of the soul in cosy isolation. According to Underhill's view, the subsequent pain and tension, and final loss of the private painful ego-centered life for the sake of regaining one's true self, has little to do with the first beatific vision. Her two later novels are built on the ideal of total self-surrender even to the apparent sacrifice of the vision itself, as necessary for the fullest possible integration of human life. This was for her the equivalent of working out within, the metaphorical intent of the life story of Jesus. One is reunited with the original vision—no longer as mere spectator but as part of it. This dimension of self-loss and resurrection is worked out in The Lost Word, but there is some doubt as to its general inevitability. In The Column of Dust, the heroine's physical death reinforces dramatically the mystical death to which she has already surrendered. Two lives are better than one but only on the condition that a process of painful re-integration intervenes to re-establish unity between Self and Reality. She had discussed him from several different perspectives during the course of her 1911 book on Mysticism.
"The Mysticism of Plotinus" (1919)
An essay originally published in The Quarterly Review (1919), and later collected in The Essentials of Mysticism and other essays (London: J. M. Dent 1920) at pp. 116–140. Underhill here addresses Plotinus (204–270) of Alexandria and later of Rome.
Worship (1936)
In her preface, the author disclaims being "a liturgical expert". Neither is it her purpose to offer criticism of the different approaches to worship as practiced by the various religious bodies. Rather she endeavors to show "the love that has gone to their adornment [and] the shelter they can offer to many different kinds of adoring souls." She begins chapter one by declaring that "Worship, in all its grades and kinds, is the response of the creature to the Eternal: nor need we limit this definition to the human sphere. ...we may think of the whole of the Universe, seen and unseen, conscious and unconscious, as an act of worship."
The chapter headings give an indication of their contents.
- Part I: 1. The Nature of Worship, 2. Ritual and Symbol, 3. Sacrament and Sacrifice, 4. The Character of Christian Worship, 5. Principles of Corporate Worship, 6. Liturgical Elements in Worship, 7. The Holy Eucharist: Its Nature, 8. The Holy Eucharist: Its Significance, 9. The Principles of Personal Worship.
- Part II: 10. Jewish Worship, 11. The Beginnings of Christian Worship, 12. Catholic Worship: Western and Eastern, 13. Worship in the Reformed Churches, 14. Free Church Worship, 15. The Anglican Tradition. Conclusion.
Influences
Underhill's life was greatly affected by her husband's resistance to her joining the Catholic Church, to which she was powerfully drawn and which she entered in the year of their marriage. At first she believed it to be only a delay in her decision, but it proved to be lifelong. He was a writer himself and was supportive of her writing both before and after their marriage in 1907, though he did not share her spiritual affinities. Her fiction was written in the six years of 1903–1909 and represents her four major interests of that general period: philosophy (neoplatonism), theism/mysticism, the Catholic liturgy, and human love/compassion. She wrote to Von Hügel about the darkness she was struggling with.
Surviving the London Blitz of 1940, her health disintegrated further and she died in the following year. She is buried with her husband in the churchyard extension at St John-at-Hampstead in London.
She helped introduce the authors of medieval and Catholic spirituality to a largely Protestant audience and the lives of eastern mystics to the English-speaking world. As a frequent guest on radio, her 1936 work The Spiritual Life was especially influential as transcribed from a series of broadcasts given as a sequel to those by Dom Bernard Clements on the subject of prayer. Fellow theologian Charles Williams wrote the introduction to her published Letters in 1943, which reveal much about this prodigious woman. Upon her death, The Times reported that on the subject of theology, she was "unmatched by any of the professional teachers of her day."
Veneration
Evelyn Underhill is honoured on 15 June in the liturgical calendars of several Anglican churches, including those of the Anglican Church of Australia, the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia, the Episcopal Anglican Church of Brazil, the Church of England, the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, and the Anglican Church in North America.
Publications
Poetry
- The Bar-Lamb's Ballad Book (1902). Online
- Immanence (1916). Online
- Theophanies (1916). Online
Novels
- The Grey World (1904). Reprint Kessinger Publishing, 1942: . Online
- The Lost Word (1907).
- The Column of Dust (1909). Online
Religion (non-fiction)
- The Miracles of Our Lady Saint Mary: Brought Out of Divers Tongues and Newly Set Forth in English (1906) Online
- Mysticism: A Study of the Nature and Development of Man's Spiritual Consciousness (1911). Twelfth edition published by E. P. Dutton in 1930. Republished by Dover Publications in 2002 (). See also online editions at Christian Classics Ethereal Library and at Wikisource
- The Path of Eternal Wisdom. A mystical commentary on the Way of the Cross (1912)
- "Introduction" to her edition of the anonymous The Cloud of Unknowing () from the British Library manuscript [here entitled A Book of Contemplation the which is called the Cloud of Unknowing, in the which a Soul is oned with God] (London: John M. Walkins 1912); reprinted as Cloud of Unknowing (1998) [her "Introduction" at 5–37]; 2007: ; see her text at Google books
- The Spiral Way. Being a meditation on the fifteen mysteries of the soul's ascent (1912)
- The Mystic Way. A psychological study of Christian origins (1914). Online
- Practical Mysticism. A Little Book for Normal People (1914); reprint 1942 (); reprinted by Vintage Books, New York 2003 [with Abba (1940)]: ; see text at Wikisource.
- Ruysbroeck (London: Bell 1915). Online
- "Introduction" to Songs of Kabir (1915) transl. by Rabindranath Tagore; reprint 1977 Samuel Weiser (), text at 5–43
- The Essentials of Mysticism and other essays (1920); another collection of her essays with the same title 1995, reprint 1999 ()
- The Life of the Spirit and the Life of Today (1920). Online
- The Mystics of the Church (1925)
- Concerning the Inner Life (1927); reprint 1999 () Online
- Man and the Supernatural. A study in theism (1927)
- The House of the Soul (1929)
- The Light of Christ (1932)
- The Golden Sequence. A fourfold study of the spiritual life (1933)
- The School of Charity. Meditations on the Christian Creed (1934); reprinted by Longmans, London 1954 [with M.of S. (1938)]
- Worship (1936)
- The Spiritual Life (1936); reprint 1999 (); see also online edition
- The Mystery of Sacrifice. A study on the liturgy (1938); reprinted by Longmans, London 1954 [with S.of C. (1934)]
- Abba. A meditation on the Lord's Prayer (1940); reprint 2003 [with Practical Mysticism (1914)]
- The Letters of Evelyn Underhill (1943), as edited by Charles Williams; reprint Christian Classics 1989:
- Shrines and Cities of France and Italy (1949), as edited by Lucy Menzies
- Fragments from an inner life. Notebooks of Evelyn Underhill (1993), as edited by Dana Greene
- The Mysticism of Plotinus (2005) Kessinger offprint, 48 pages. Taken from The Essentials of Mysticism (1920)
Anthologies
- Fruits of the Spirit (1942) edited by R. L. Roberts; reprint 1982,
- The letters of Evelyn Underhill (1943) edited with an intro. by Charles Williams
- Collected Papers of Evelyn Underhill (1946) edited by L. Menzies and introduced by L. Barkway
- Lent with Evelyn Underhill (1964) edited by G. P. Mellick Belshaw
- An Anthology of the Love of God. From the writings of Evelyn Underhill (1976) edited by L. Barkway and L. Menzies
- The Ways of the Spirit (1990) edited by G. A. Brame; reprint 1993,
- Evelyn Underhill. Modern guide to the ancient quest for the Holy (1988) edited and introduced by D. Greene
- Evelyn Underhill. Essential writings (2003) edited by E. Griffin
- Radiance: A Spiritual Memoir (2004) edited by Bernard Bangley,
- Then May the Senses Fall: Evelyn Underhill's Forgotten Fiction (2025), edited by William Gillard and Robert Stauffer,
See also
- List of peace activists
- John of the Cross
References
Further reading
- A. M. Allchin, Friendship in God - The Encounter of Evelyn Underhill and Sorella Maria of Campello (SLG Press, Fairacres Oxford 2003)
- Margaret Cropper, The Life of Evelyn Underhill (New York 1958)
- Michael Ramsey and A. M. Allchin, Evelyn Underhill. Two centenary essays (Oxford 1977)
- Annice Callahan, Evelyn Underhill: Spirituality for daily living (University Press of America 1997)
- Dana Greene, Evelyn Underhill. Artist of the infinite life (University of Notre Dame 1998)
External links
- Works at Open Library
- Works by Evelyn Underhill at King's College, London [https://kingscollections.org/catalogues/kclca/collection/u/10un20-1]
- The Evelyn Underhill Association
- Evelyn Underhill bio and writing at the Christian Classics Ethereal Library
