INTRODUCTION
In 2018 the National Trust undertook a major re-development of a part of the gardens at Sissinghurst Castle that had originally been laid out by Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson just before the outbreak of the Second World War. Named Delos – after the sacred island at the centre of the Cyclades – this garden compartment was inspired by Vita and Harold’s visit to the island on 18 April 1935. A series of photographs taken while the couple were there show familiar monuments such as the Terrace of the Naxian Lions, or the Temple of Apollo. It is also evident that they climbed Mount Cynthus (at least in part) (figs 1–3).Footnote 1
Those familiar with the gardens at Sissinghurst might find it odd that Harold and Vita should take inspiration from the waterless and rocky island to create a garden in the Kentish Weald. After all, Sissinghurst is far removed from the Aegean and indeed any other sea. Moreover, the gardens at Sissinghurst are considered a quintessential example of a romantic English garden. However, for both Harold and Vita, the imagery of the classical world informed their writing.Footnote 2 For Harold, the fate of Greece – both ancient and modern – had a particular resonance. Harold, in his role in the Political Intelligence Department, was a staunch champion of Greece during the Paris Peace Conference of 1919–20. Indeed, his admiration of the Greek prime minister, Eleftherios Venizelos, even went so far as to support Greece’s doomed Megali Idea strongly stating that ‘Greek claims in Asia Minor are justified’.Footnote 3 Harold’s admiration for Greece was articulated in one of his columns written for The Spectator:
There is, however, one natural element in Greece which always surprises me with its immutability: the Greek national character. No nation on earth has, within the last half century, endured such terrible calamities. Since 1897 the Greeks have experienced six major wars, four foreign invasions, two civil wars—the first distracting, the second fiercely destructive—all manner of coups d’etat and pronunciamientos, several revolts, three serious revolutions, and a succession of economic catastrophes such as would have shattered any weaker breed … No, I am certain that I could not really like anybody who did not really like the Greeks.Footnote 4
Greece and the classical tradition entered Vita’s writing most notably in two works. The fictional Greek island of Herakleion was the setting for her 1923 novel Challenge.Footnote 5 Perhaps more tellingly for our understanding of the Delos Garden at Sissinghurst, Vita’s epic poem Solitude of 1938 heavily alluded to classical imagery.Footnote 6 In particular, Solitude has been interpreted as Vita’s attempt to bridge her understanding of a pagan nature with the Christian, English literary tradition through the use of classical allusion. In the following stanzas of the poem, imagery of the English countryside is brought directly into proximity with classical myth:
Although, the Nicolsons’ visit to Delos would have seen the island and the ruins clothed with spring flowers, this is not the reason why, several years after their visit, they decided to evoke their memories of the island.Footnote 8 Rather, the garden compartment was named after three marble altars and a Corinthian capital that adorned it. Alongside a fourth identical altar, located in the orchard, these antiquities share the same provenance, arriving at Sissinghurst in 1936.
These four cylindrical altars located in the gardens of Sissinghurst are carved from blocks of fine-grained white marble and are each adorned, in high-relief, with bucrannia, swags of flowers and of foliage from which hang bunches of grapes.Footnote 9 The bucrannia are further adorned with pomegranates, bands of ribbons and ears of wheat. All this speaks of the altars’ original religious function. The Corinthian capital is also carved from a similar fine-grained white marble. All four altars and the capital show staining and weathering and losses to their original form.Footnote 10 They also have carved ‘mortices’ on their flat, top surfaces – a feature that they share with other similar Delian altars in British collections (see below). These deeply carved ‘mortices’ may have been used to accommodate the tenons of carved dedicatory stele. Although the altars are certainly the most significant antiquities at Sissinghurst (and among the most significant in the National Trust’s holdings), they have not been published before (figs 4 and 5).Footnote 11
As mentioned, just before the outbreak of the Second World War, the three altars and the Corinthian capital were arranged in the Delos Garden – with the fourth being placed in the orchard. The sole historic photograph of how the area looked shows that the altars were set along the edge of a path, leading towards the Priest’s House (fig 6). Above this a series of low terraces were constructed from the architectural fragments of the Old Castle, which were executed in Kentish sandstone. These terraces evoked the low walls and reused spolia that characterise the layout of the archaeological site of Delos (fig 7). As the Old Castle had been sited on a rise in the land, the surrounding agricultural landscape falls gently away and, from the Delos Garden, the effect was ‘reminiscent’ of the view of the harbour of Delos when seen from the lower slopes of Mount Cynthus (fig 8).Footnote 12
After the War, the Delos Garden, though it retained its name, was remodelled and planted with English springtime flowers. The terraces were removed and the three altars were moved to an upper area of the site, where they were partially obscured by planting. Although they remained in their original compartment, their visual impact was greatly reduced and, rather than forming a central role in the thematic concept of the Delos Garden, they could be easily overlooked as mere garden ornaments of no great import. The Corinthian capital was relocated to the herb garden adjacent to the celebrated Thyme Lawn.
The fourth altar, which did not form part of the Delos Garden and remained in its original position in the orchard after the War, is distinguished from its companions by being mounted on a much later, saltire cross-shaped plinth in granite (fig 9). In a jocular manner, Vita’s family dubbed the orchard altar ‘The Humbug’. The reason for this will be explained presently.
BRITISH ANTIQUARIES AND DELOS
David Noy, in his essay ‘Dreams inspired by Phoebus: Western visitors to Delos from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century’, traces the history of British antiquarianism on Delos over the period of two and a half centuries.Footnote 13 Noy mentions the Sissinghurst altars briefly in his work, but does not single them out as being remarkable.
The cylindrical, drum-like form of the Sissinghurst altars is typical for the island. Similar altars, adorned with garlands and with bucrania and carved in the same fine-grained white marble as their Sissinghurst counterparts, may still be seen at the archaeological site. Undoubtedly some may still be in situ in their original location; for example, a number of such altars are located around the Thesmorphion and it would be tempting to think that the imagery of pomegranates and ears of wheat indicates a link to Demeter and Persephone.Footnote 14
The presence of such altars in a British collection is also not unique; neither was their display in the gardens of a significant residence.Footnote 15 The amassing of antiquities from the island of Delos by British collectors goes back to those virtuosi of the court of Charles i, as Noy explains. Agents, working there for British patrons, had been discovering choice works of the classical past since the 1620s. One of the reasons why British antiquaries were particularly drawn to Delos was due to the influence of Sir Thomas Roe (1581–1644). Roe was the British Ambassador to the Sublime Porte, and, although he did not visit the island, his Greek contacts in Constantinople informed him that both Delos and neighbouring Rhenia were rich in antiquities. Moreover, both islands were deserted and thus any removal of antiquities by British virtuosi – or their agents – would not be met with the protests of the local Greek population or of the Ottoman authorities. Roe entered into the service of the two greatest collectors of the Stuart Court – George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, and Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel – providing advice to the rival virtuosi as to where to search for choice marbles. Notably, Roe suggested that Howard should dispatch his agents to Delos.Footnote 16
Delian altars, of the type in the collections at Sissinghurst Castle, were to be found in the celebrated ‘garden museum’ at Arundel House, the Strand, London – the London home of the Earl of Arundel and his wife Alatheia. There, they were most likely used as plinths for the antique figurative sculptures that were placed in the gardens of that house.Footnote 17 Indeed, during excavations of the former site of Arundel House and its gardens in 1972, two such altars, almost identical to the Sissinghurst examples, were found – remnants of the Earl of Arundel’s celebrated collection (extraordinarily, one of these altars was soon after reported to have been ‘removed’ from the site of the dig and its current location is still unknown).Footnote 18 Noy also suggests that they may might have acted as the pedestals for the collection of antique sculptures displayed in the privy garden at the Palace of Whitehall. A much later watercolour of The Sculpture Gallery of the Examination Schools, Oxford (1813), by William Westall, shows Delian altars from the Arundel collections acting as plinths – just as we suppose they did in the Thames-side gardens of Arundel House.Footnote 19 Further, five Delos-type altars were acquired in 1817/18 by Amabel [sic], Countess de Grey, and were placed within the Great Garden at Wrest Park. Noy accords this grouping of antiquities considerable attention as, he argues, their provenance connects them to ‘all three phases of Delian interest’ demonstrated by British antiquaries and collectors that concern him in his essay.Footnote 20 That is, he speculates that the Wrest Park altars first came to Britain as part of the initial seventeenth-century explorations of the island, to then enter the collections of Richard Topham in the eighteenth century before finally coming to Wrest Park in the first two decades of the nineteenth century.
For Noy, the altars at Sissinghurst were not unique either in terms of their typology or in terms of the history of antiquarianism and collecting in Britain. However, one aspect of the Sissinghurst Altars does, arguably, differentiate them from the Delian antiquities covered by Noy; that is the explicitly political use they were put to when they arrived in the British Isles. This makes them unique and – dare one say – more interesting than the altars that were mere adornments to Countess de Grey’s Great Garden at Wrest Park or that were mere plinths for the sculptures that formed part of the Arundel Marbles.
THE CASTLE SHANGANAGH COLLECTION OF ANTIQUITIES
The four altars and associated Corinthian capital are first recorded in the collections of General Sir George Cockburn (1763–1847) of Shanganagh Castle, Co Wicklow, Ireland.Footnote 21
Cockburn’s interest in antiquities would have been piqued when he undertook the Grand Tour of Italy between 1782 and 1783, visiting Pisa, Florence, Rome and Naples.Footnote 22 His next encounter with the Mediterranean world was occasioned when he was posted to Sicily with the British Army fighting Napoleon. There he found time to also undertake a number of excursions to the classical sites of the island as well as to explore other islands in the area. This tour of the western Mediterranean he later published as A Voyage to Cadiz and Gibraltar, up the Mediterranean to Sicily and Malta in 1810 and 1811, including a description of Sicily and the Lipari Islands, and an Excursion in Portugal.Footnote 23 Although Cockburn did not travel as far as Delos and the Aegean, his account described with interest the many classical sites of Sicily, such as the temples at Segesta and at Agrignetum. He also described specific antiquities, including statues, sarcophagi etc that he had occasion to view in various Sicilian collections such as the museum at Palermo.Footnote 24 At Catania he viewed the theatre, baths and amphitheatre as well as the archaeological and numismatic collections in the museo of the Palazzo Biscari.Footnote 25 Writing in his reminiscences of his travels he notes that he:
went to the famous Museum of Prince Biscaris [sic], which is well worth seeing, being a collection of antiquities of all sorts, and arranged with taste, in rooms built for the purpose: There are various Mosaic ancient pavements, a remarkable fine torso, statues, busts, alto-reliefs [sic], and old inscriptions and columns; a fine collection of Etruscan vases.Footnote 26
Although this description of the collections at the Palazzo Biscari is brief, it might be argued that his experience of viewing them would resonate with him at a later date.
Returning to Ireland, Cockburn settled at Shanganagh and turned his attention to politics; he was described in The Gentleman’s Magazine ‘as a violent reformer and an admirer of Cobbett’.Footnote 27 In particular, he was a fervent supporter of the 1832 Reform Act. More properly termed The Representation of the People Act, it introduced major changes to the electoral system in England and Wales giving – among other things – representation to cities and extending the franchise to small landowners, tenant farmers, shopkeepers and householders who were able to pay a rent of £10 per annum or more. Cockburn’s support of the 1832 Reform Act will have a crucial bearing on our understanding of the role, within his collection, of the four marble altars and Corinthian capital from Delos.
Cockburn amassed his own collection of various antiquities, such as stele, cippi, sarcophagi and ceramics as well as Latin inscriptions.Footnote 28 It is not clear exactly when Cockburn formed this collection, though Louis C Purser, in his 1925 publication of the antiquities at Shanganagh, placed the acquisition of the bulk of the collection in 1805 with additions in the 1820s.Footnote 29 The inventory of the collection, as compiled by Purser, shows that the General was mainly interested in Roman antiquities that contained epigraphic material and were of a commemorative, funerary nature. Although Purser’s interest lay in these collections of inscriptions at Shanganagh, he does mention in passing the four Sissinghurst altars (it is perhaps telling that no mention is made of any classical statuary, even in passing). The exact provenance (and find spots) of the Roman antiquities is not fully recorded; a summary description was given in the catalogue listing the contents of the castle. The antiquities are not properly recorded by Cockburn in his diaries, which Purser had occasion to read.Footnote 30 However, Purser states that a large number of the antiquities had belonged to ‘an excavator called Capranesi, and were carefully copied by the distinguished antiquarians Carlo Fea and Hieronymus Amati’.Footnote 31
Cockburn’s antiquities were grouped together and displayed in two areas of Castle Shanganagh.Footnote 32 The inscriptions, which Purser records as being eighty-seven in number and of a sepulchral character, were fixed to the walls of a passage leading to what had been a bathroom.Footnote 33 Cockburn termed this passage his Piccolo Vaticano and evidently held great store in this collection (though by the time Purser had undertaken his visit to the castle, the Piccolo Vaticano had been turned into a pantry).Footnote 34 The larger marbles, such as the stele and sarcophagi, which were also of a sepulchral nature, were installed in what Harold Nicolson named the ‘Monumental Room’ (Purser describes it as the entrance hall).Footnote 35 In the garden, Purser also listed a number of cippi.Footnote 36
THE DELIAN ANTIQUITIES AND THE REFORM BILL OF 1832
The four marble altars and Corinthian capital form an exception in the Shanganagh collection. They are not inscribed and are of Greek/ Hellenistic origin, which Cockburn recognised at the time (see below). We also have a good idea of their provenance, although not their exact find spot on Delos.Footnote 37 The four altars (and most probably the historically associated Corinthian capital) were found on Delos by Commodore William Gawen Rowan Hamilton, who was Cockburn’s son-in-law (Hamilton was also the great-grandfather of Harold Nicolson on his mother’s side, hence the future connection to Sissinghurst). Hamilton, who had distinguished himself during the Napoleonic campaigns as a naval officer, would later play an active role during the Greek War of Independence (1821–30) and was active in the seas around the island of Delos. It was Hamilton who presented the four altars to his father-in-law.
Harold Nicolson, in The Desire to Please: a story of Hamilton Rowan and the United Irishmen, described the circumstances by which Commodore Hamilton acquired the altars:
The Commodore spent the years from 1820 on in the eastern Mediterranean, winning the title of ‘Liberator of Greece’ by protecting the Greeks against the Turks and spending much of his private fortune in this cause; and while cruising during all those years among the islands of the Aegean, would from time to time recall the tastes of his father-in-law and send back to Shanganagh, now the fragment of an Ionic column, now some shattered inscriptions from Nauplia or Epidaurus. On one occasion he had found (it may well have been among the deserted stones of Delos) four Greek altars of marble on which were carved rich swags of grape, of pomegranate and myrtle suspended between the heads of bulls. Eventually these altars arrived at Shanganagh in the company of a Corinthian capital of later date.Footnote 38
Harold Nicolson – a fervent Hellenophile – must have delighted in this direct familial link with one of the historic ‘Liberators of Greece’.
Nicolson goes on to explain that, when the altars arrived at Shanganagh, ‘They were too large to house in the Monumental Room [entrance hall]’. Instead, the four cylindrical altars were treated like the drums of a column. A granite base, in the form of a saltire cross and executed in Wicklow granite, was positioned outside in front of the entrance hall and the altars were erected one on top of the other in the form of a column (fig 10).Footnote 39 The Corinthian capital surmounted this column; the resulting (ill-proportioned) monument recalled a similar arrangement of classical antiquities that, although not mentioned directly by Cockburn, would have been seen by him on his visit to the Palazzo Biscari in Catania. In one of the ‘museum’ rooms he would have seen a classical altar: carved in high-relief, supporting the base and drum of a Corinthian column and surmounted by an unrelated Doric capital.Footnote 40
Cockburn had the granite base inscribed with the following when it was first erected:
This Column Erected in July 1832 by Gen. Sir G. Cockburn G.C.H. to Commemorate The Reform Bills passed this year is formed of ancient Greek Marbles (The Granite Base Excepted) Sent to him from the Levant By his Son in Law Captain W.G. Hamilton R.N. C.B.
This inscription is telling in a number of ways. First, it is the earliest written corroboration of the four altars’ provenance: who found them and very roughly where they came from. Second, the inscription clearly shows that Cockburn, as a collector of antiquities, put some store into the fact that the altars and capital were Greek. They are prominently described as ‘ancient Greek marbles’ on the inscription and the granite base is explicitly explained as ‘modern’. Third, Cockburn is using these marbles to make a public statement regarding his support of the Reform Bill of 1832. Although located in the private grounds of his home at Shanganagh Castle, any visitor to the house would not fail to notice the striking monument with its dedicatory inscription when arriving at the castle’s entrance.
It is this use of the Sissinghurst marbles to create a visible political statement that differentiates them from the use or methods of display of other similar Delian antiquities in British antiquarian collections. Although Harold Nicolson’s account states that Cockburn was forced to construct the monument due to a lack of space in the Monumental Room at Shanganagh, there might be another reason why these particular marbles were selected to commemorate a reformist and progressive political act – the Reform Bill of 1832.Footnote 41
The visual language of classical Greece was redolent of the ideals of democracy and freedom in the British imagination during the first part of the nineteenth century. As Byron, in his poem The Isles of Greece, wrote:
In March 1832 the independent kingdom of Greece was established,Footnote 43 and that same year a hoped for liberty would be sought through the Redemption of the People Act in Britain.
That the Greek Revival in architecture, sculpture and interest in identifiably Greek antiquities occurred during the 1820s and 1830s when the clamour for political reform in Britain was heightened is not a mere coincidence. The aligning of ‘liberty’ with the genius of Greek art and architecture was touched upon by a contemporary: the great architect and collector of antiquities Sir John Soane in his first Royal Academy lecture in 1810 (this lecture was repeated in 1832).Footnote 44 As Soane explained:
Grecian architecture […] owes its origin and perfection to causes very different from those already spoken of [that of Egypt, India and Persia]. The Greeks were the fathers of science and art. Their climate, their laws, their mode of life, all contributed to gain them a superior rank in the higher walk of intellect.
Unlike the autocratic regimes of Egypt and Persia, Greece was governed by opposite political laws – those of democracy and ‘freedom’ – and this, as Soane reasoned, led to the flowering of that particular Greek ‘genius’ in art, architecture, philosophy and law. Indeed, Soane understood that the Greeks lost ‘a great degree their love for the arts’ once they lost their freedoms to Rome, thus neatly aligning their artistry with their political liberties.Footnote 45
It is reasonable to think that Cockburn was aware of this broader association of Greek art and architecture with concepts of liberty and democracy both modern and ancient.Footnote 46 After all, his son-in-law who gave him the marbles was dubbed ‘The Liberator of Greece’. It is arguable, then, that, for Cockburn, the use of genuine ‘Greek marbles’ would have been especially appropriate in the creation of a monument to a Bill intended to reform British politics.Footnote 47
Unfortunately, Cockburn’s hopes for the Reform Bill of 1832 were not realised. Six years after the column with its inscription was raised at Shanganagh a second inscription was added to the base of the column commenting on his disillusionment:
July 1838.
Alas to this date a Hum Bug
It is this second inscription that inspired Vita, Harold and their children to name the altar and base of Cockburn’s monument, located in the orchard at Sissinghurst, ‘The Humbug’ a century or so later.
JOURNEY OF THE DELIAN ANTIQUITIES TO SISSINGHURST
In 1847 General Sir George Cockburn died. He left careful instructions in his will that:
as to all actual fixtures [the Roman inscriptions] in the walls especially the little passage to the bath which I call the Piccolo Vaticano I do not intend that they should be stirred or removed even if the place were disposed of or sold. They would not in this country bring anything of the price they were collected at by myself chiefly in Rome (dear Rome) and are highly valuable interesting and curious and I would wish to have them preserved entire if possible.Footnote 48
It is clear that the General’s wishes were followed and moreover that the other antiquities including the column dedicated to the 1832 Reform Bill remained in situ. It was still there when Harold Nicolson, as a young boy, stayed at Shanganagh while visiting his grandmother. It was there also when Louis C Purser visited the castle in order to catalogue the collections of inscriptions and of antique ceramics in the mid-1920s for the Royal Irish Academy, although Purser stated that ‘there were five concentric circles of these marbles but the top one is now vacant’. Perhaps Purser is referring to the Corinthian capital, which surmounted the monument in its original form, rather than a fifth altar and that was no longer present when Purser came to view it.Footnote 49
To understand how the altars came to Sissinghurst, let us once more turn to Harold’s writing. Given the political use to which the altars were put and their discovery on Delos by one of the ‘Liberators of Greece’, it is appropriate that their arrival in Kent is related in a work of political biography and the Irish struggle for liberty: the already cited The Desire to Please: a story of Hamilton Rowan and the United Irishmen. Here, Nicolson describes how the altars, capital and base found their way to Sissinghurst:
When my grandmother died in 1919 my uncle Gawen, in a moment of impatience, suddenly sold Shanganagh with all its contents. In 1936 it again came into the market, and being anxious to rescue some at least of the memories of my childhood, I crossed to Dublin and attended the sale. I bought the column as it stood and had the altars and the top tier of the base transported to my home at Sissinghurst. Three of the altars and the Corinthian capital were disposed, with some ungainliness, along a garden path. The fourth, with the base and the inscription, was erected in the orchard.Footnote 50
This ‘ungainly’ garden path that Nicolson referred to was the short-lived Delos Garden compartment that Vita and Harold created just before the outbreak of the Second World War. It has been rejuvenated by the National Trust and is where three of the altars and the Corinthian capital are now sited.Footnote 51
These marbles have undertaken a remarkable pilgrimage and, if shorn of their original religious function and of their secondary political symbolism that they acquired in Ireland, they stand as testament to Vita and Harold’s modern political and modernist literary philhellenism. The altars form a sculpture gallery within a seminal twentieth (or even dare one say twenty-first) century garden that was intended to explicitly evoke the antique world (fig 11). They tie Vita and Harold’s Delos Garden back to that tradition started by Thomas and Alethea Howard in the gardens at Arundel House and continued by the Countess de Grey at Wrest Park. As with so much of Vita and Harold’s life, as expressed though their writing, collecting and gardening, the display of the Delian altars and Corinthian capital at Sissinghurst today is as contemporary as it is traditional.
POSTSCRIPT
The final remark to be made relates to Harold Nicolson’s own political involvement with the (now) vexed question of the presence of Greek antiquities in British collections. In 1924, while serving in the Foreign Office, Harold Nicolson submitted a memorandum to the government of Ramsey McDonald calling for the return of one of the Erechtheion caryatids to Greece to mark the hundredth anniversary of the death of Lord Byron in the Greek War of Independence. Nicolson observed of Lord Elgin’s legal argument for removing sculptures from the Athenian Acropolis that ‘Even a most free and lavish translation of the Italian tongue cannot twist these words [the Ottoman Firman giving permission to remove already loose architectural elements and inscriptions] into meaning a whole shipload of sculptures, columns and caryatids’. Nicolson’s memorandum was not acted upon.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to thank Donald Lickley for his help and support in writing this paper; Eleanor Black, collections and house manager, Sissinghurst, for her help with images; Adam Nicolson FSA for his advice; Sue Palmer FSA, archivist, Sir John Soane’s Museum, for her kind advice; National Trust Images; the Irish Architectural Archive; and Country Life Picture Gallery.