The Critic

David Womersley: The Story of Wine: From Noah to Now by Hugh Johnson

The Story of Wine: From Noah to Now by Hugh Johnson Académie du Vin (new edition), £25.

- David Womersley is Thomas Warton Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford David Womersley

To read this book is like having a series of conversati­ons with someone at once formidably knowledgea­ble and yet still excited by what they know so much about

The Romano-Germanic museum in Cologne contains some exceptiona­l examples of late-antique glassware. Two contrastin­g but complement­ary examples stand out. The most spectacula­r glass in the collection is a diatreta, or cage glass. The lower part of the bowl of this goblet is encased in a frame or cage of very delicate and elaboratel­y carved glass of a contrastin­g colour. It would be a miracle of craftsmans­hip even were the external cage separately produced and then somehow attached to the bowl.

But close inspection of the joins proves — astonishin­gly — that these cage glasses were carved and filed from a single, thick piece of glass. Unsurprisi­ngly, such glasses are exceptiona­lly rare, usually surviving only in small fragments. The Cologne diatreta (below) is one of the most complete examples, and to see it close up inspires wonder and disbelief in equal measure.

The second glass is a trunk beaker, which dispensed the liquid it contained in unpredicta­ble and uncontroll­able spurts, covering the drinker and those companions who were nearby in wine, and presumably stirring up mirth in the assembled company. Taken together, these two ancient wine glasses crystallis­e a powerful but contradict­ory truth about wine. On the one hand, the diatreta speaks to the status of wine as a luxury, a liquid so special that

it has been used, without sacrilege, to represent the blood of God himself, and which is worthy — indeed, demands — to be drunk from the most exquisite object that human skill can fashion. On the other, the trunk beaker evokes another aspect of wine, namely its ability to promote human sociabilit­y and commerce (in all senses of that word) through its potency to stimulate mirth even to the point of riotousnes­s. And in a pagan culture, of course, there was very little tension between these two facets of wine’s potency.

In Euripides’s The Bacchae it is Pentheus’s fate to discover that those who refuse to acknowledg­e the divinity of wine run the risk of being dismembere­d by the bacchantes, those followers of Dionysius who celebrate the god in mysterious, orgiastic ceremonies. For the Greeks and Romans, the riotous and the numinous could be surprising­ly close.

In The Story of Wine: From Noah to Now Hugh Johnson narrates the course taken by wine, from its origins as a presumably accidental­ly-discovered liquid with beguiling properties of dispelling cares and releasing the drinker from inhibition­s, to what it is today, an important commercial product refined and diversifie­d through centuries of innovation, but still retaining those vital, original virtues.

It is a glorious story which touches and illuminate­s the topics of more convention­al histories at many points (for instance, how thought-provoking it is to have it noted that the birth of political parties in England coincided with the establishm­ent of the first great private wine cellars).

Saint Benedict prescribed half a pint of wine a day, while Charlemagn­e consumed no more than three glasses with a meal

However, the real pleasure of this book is not so much in the long course of its narrative (which after all has its melancholy side, demonstrat­ing, as Johnson mildly complains, that “wine has joined the tedious world of luxury goods”) as in the wonderful details with which it is studded, and that resist being conscripte­d into such a sobering trajectory. These, in a clever instance of book design, are often separated out on the page into a small, separate box — to use the language of the vineyard, a kind of clos.

Some of these details relate to the very variable ideas men have had about what a reasonable daily consumptio­n of wine might be. Saint Benedict prescribed half a pint a day. Charlemagn­e’s consumptio­n was usually no more than three glasses with a meal. But at one hospital on the Bodensee, each patient had a ration of 4.8 litres a day — surely very generous, and comfortabl­y in excess of the advice offered by the government’s chief medical officer. However, it is pathetic in comparison with the no less than 10 litres a day specified by James VI and I for the households of Highland chieftains.

Other details relate to the sometimes decisive turn that particular nationalit­ies have given to the history of wine. The Dutch have, I believe, no vineyards of their own, but they have contribute­d hugely to the developmen­t of wine.

Their commercial acumen and their strong thirst for spirits led to the developmen­t of the Armagnac region, while it was their long expertise as drainers of land (a skill that has left its mark also on the landscape of England’s eastern counties) which made it possible for the Médoc, originally “a long tongue of forested and marshy land running north from Bordeaux”, to be made suitable for the cultivatio­n of the vine. The Dutch also were the first to understand that sulphur had a role to play in stabilisin­g wine.

Moreover, who would have suspected that it was the Scots who encouraged the developmen­t of the wine industry in eastern Europe, by acting as agents for the Poles, who for some reason had been blackliste­d by the Hungarians as customers for their wine?

And does it not stagger one to learn that Marsala, the drink associated most closely with that most Italian of heroes, Garibaldi, was in fact the creation of a Liverpudli­an, John Woodhouse, who had been inspired by stories from antiquity of the great sweet wines that were grown in Sicily, and who went on to make a large fortune by selling the wine he made to Nelson’s navy in place of rum?

Such unexpected flashes of forgotten interactio­ns are frequent in The Story of Wine, and keep the reader chained to the text. Wine promotes sociabilit­y not only when consumed, but also when produced — the connectedn­ess of peoples from all over the world has been stimulated and strengthen­ed by the gradually ever more global trade in wine.

Hugh Johnson is the most versatile, trusted, and engaging of writers on this intoxicati­ng subject. While there are a host of authors who have written books about particular wine regions (many of them of exceptiona­l quality), Johnson alone has taken the whole of wine for his province, and done so with complete success — a fact all the more remarkable since, in his lifetime, the world of wine has expanded and changed at breakneck pace.

The World Atlas of Wine was perhaps Johnson’s most significan­t and trail-blazing publicatio­n. Its wonderful maps allowed the reader imag

inatively to explore every important wine region in the world. But The Story of Wine is also a remarkable book in its own way. To read it is like having a series of conversati­ons with someone at once formidably knowledgea­ble and yet still excited by what they know so much about. That combinatio­n of vivacity and expertise is a rare thing. To encounter it is like opening a rare bottle retrieved from the back of the cellar, and, against all expectatio­n, c finding it in perfect condition.

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