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It would be unpardonable to allow the notion to be entertained that it
was only in poetry that the writers of the Thirteenth Century
succeeded in creating works of enduring influence. Some of the prose
writings of the time are deeply interesting for many reasons. Modern
prose was in its formative period, and the evolution of style, as of
other things in the making, is proverbially worthy of more serious
study than even the developed result. The prose writings of the
Thirteenth Century were mainly done in Latin, but that was not for
lack of command over the vernacular tongues, as we shall see, but
because this was practically a universal language. This century had
among other advantages that subsequent ages have striven for
unsuccessfully, our own most of all, a common medium of expression for
all scholars at least. There are, however, the beginnings of Prose
in all the modern languages and it is easy to understand that the Latin
of the time had a great influence on the vernacular and that the modes
of expression which had become familiar in the learned tongue, were
naturally transferred to the vulgar speech, as it was called, whenever
accuracy of thought and nicety of expression invited such
transmutation.
With regard to the Latin of the period it is the custom of many
presumably well-educated men to sniff a little and say deprecatingly,
that after all much cannot be expected from the writers of the time,
since they were dependent on medieval or scholastic Latin for the
expression of their ideas. This criticism is supposed to do away with
any idea of the possibility of there having been a praiseworthy prose
style, at this time in the Middle Ages. In the chapter on the
Latin Hymns, we call attention to the fact that this same mode of
criticism was supposed to preclude all possibility of rhymed Latin, as
worthy to occupy a prominent place in literature. The widespread
encouragement of this false impression has, as a matter of fact, led
to a neglect of these wonderful poems, though they may in the opinion
of competent critics, even be considered as representing the true
genius of the Latin language and its powers of poetic expression better
than the Greek poetic modes, which were adopted by the Romans, but
which, with the possible exception of their two greatest poets, never
seem to have acquired that spontaneity that would characterize a native
outburst of lingual vitality.
As for the philosophic writers of the century that great period holds
in this, as in other departments, the position of the palmiest time of
the Middle Ages. To it belongs Alexander Hales, the Doctor
Irrefragabilis who disputes with Aquinas the prize for the best
example of the Summa Theologiae; Bonaventure the Mystic, and
writer of beautiful hymns; Roger Bacon, the natural philosopher;
Vincent of Beauvais, the encyclopedist. While of the four,
greatest of all, Albertus Magnus, the "Dumb Ox of Cologne,"
was born seven years before its opening, his life lasted over
four-fifths of it; that of Aquinas covered its second and third
quarters; Occam himself, though his main exertions lie beyond this
century, was probably born before Aquinas died; while John Duns
Scotus hardly outlived the century's close by a decade. Raymond
Lully, one of the most characteristic figures of Scholasticism and of
the medieval period (with his "great art" of automatic philosophy),
who died in 1315, was born as early as 1235. Peter the
Spaniard, Pope and author of the Summulae Logicales, the grammar
of formal logic for ages as well of several medieval treatises that have
attracted renewed attention in our day, died in 1277.
With regard to what was accomplished in philosophic and theologic
prose, examples will be found in the chapter on St. Thomas
Aquinas, which prove beyond all doubt the utter simplicity, the
directness, and the power of the prose of the Thirteenth Century.
In the medical works of the time there was less directness, but always
a simplicity that made them commendable. In general, university
writers were influenced by the scholastic methods and we find it
reflected constantly in their works. In the minds of many people this
would be enough at once to condemn it. It will usually be found,
however, as we have noted before, that those who are readiest to
condemn scholastic writing know nothing about it, or so little that
their opinion is not worth considering. Usually they have whatever
knowledge they think they possess, at second hand. Sometimes all that
they have read of scholastic philosophy are some particularly obscure
passages on abstruse subjects, selected by some prejudiced historian,
in order to show how impossible was the philosophic writing of these
centuries of the later Middle Ages.
There are other opinions, however, that are of quite different
significance and value. We shall quote but one of them, written by
Professor Saintsbury of the University of Edinburgh, who in his
volume on the Flourishing of Romance and the Rise of Allegory (the
Twelfth and Thirteenth centuries) of his Periods of European
Literature, has shown how sympathetically the prose writing of the
Thirteenth Century may appeal even to a scholarly modern, whose main
interests have been all his life in literature. Far from thinking that
prose was spoiled by scholasticism, Prof. Saintsbury considers that
schoasticism was the fortunate training school in which all the
possibilities of modern prose were brought out and naturally introduced
into the budding languages of the time. He says:
"However this may be" (whether the science of the Nineteenth
Century after an equal interval will be of any more positive value,
whether it will not have even less comparative interest than that which
appertains to the scholasticism of the Thirteenth Century) "the
claim modest, and even meager as it may seem to some, which has been
here once more put forward for this scholasticism -- the claim of a
far-reaching educative influence in mere language, in mere system of
arrangement and expression, will remain valid. If at the outset of
the career of modern languages, men had thought with the looseness of
modern thought, had indulged in the haphazard slovenliness of modern
logic, had popularized theology and vulgarized rhetoric, as we have
seen both popularized and vulgarized since, we should indeed have been
in evil case. It used to be thought clever to moralize and to
felicitate mankind over the rejection of the stays, the fetters, the
prison in which its thought was medievally kept. The justice or the
injustice, the taste or the vulgarity of these moralizings, of these
felicitations, may not concern us here. But in expression, as
distinguished from thought, the value of the discipline to which these
youthful languages was subjected is not likely now to be denied by any
scholar who has paid attention to the subject. It would have been
perhaps a pity if thought had not gone through other phases; it would
certainly have been a pity if the tongues had been subjected to the
fullest influence of Latin constraint. But that the more lawless of
them benefited by that constraint there can be no doubt whatever. The
influence of form which the best Latin hymns of the Middle Ages
exercised in poetry, the influence in vocabulary and in logical
arrangement which scholasticism exercised in prose are beyond dispute:
and even those who will not pardon literature, whatever its historic
and educative importance be, for being something less than masterly in
itself, will find it difficult to maintain the exclusion of the Cur
Deus Homo, and impossible to refuse admission to the "Dies
Irae."
Besides this philosophic and scientific prose, there were two forms of
writing of which this century presents a copious number of examples.
These are the chronicles and biographies of the time and the stories of
travelers and explorers. These latter we have treated in a separate
chapter. The chronicles of the time deserve to be studied with patient
attention by anyone who wishes to know the prose writers of the century
and the character of the men of that time and their outlook on life.
It is usually considered that chroniclers are rather tiresome old
fogies who talk much and say very little, who accept all sorts of
legends on insufficient authority and who like to fill up their pages
with wonderful things regardless of their truth. In this regard it
must not be forgotten that in times almost within the memory of men
still alive, Herodotus now looked upon deservedly as the Father of
History and one of the great historical writers of all time, was
considered to have a place among these chroniclers, and his works were
ranked scarcely higher, except for the purity of their Greek style.
The first of the great chroniclers in a modern tongue was the famous
Geoffrey de Villehardouin, who was not only a writer of, but an
actor in the scenes which he describes. He was enrolled among the
elite of French Chivalry, in that Crusade at the beginning of the
Thirteenth Century, which resulted in the foundation of the
Greco-Latin Empire. His book entitled "The Conquest of
Constantinople," includes the story of the expedition during the
years from 1198 to 1207. Modern war correspondents have seldom
succeeded in giving a more vivid picture of the events of which they
were witnesses than this first French chronicler of the Thirteenth
Century. It is evident that the work was composed with the idea that
it should be recited, as had been the old poetic Chansons de Geste,
in the castles of the nobles and before assemblages of the people,
perhaps on fair days and other times when they were gathered together.
The consequence is that it is written in a lively straightforward style
with direct appeals to its auditors.
It contains not a few passages of highly poetic description which show
that the chronicler was himself a literary man ot no mean order and
probably well versed in the effusions of the old poets of this country.
His description of the fleet of the Crusaders as it was about to set
sail for the East and then his description of its arrival before the
imposing walls of the Imperial City, are the best examples of this,
and have not been surpassed even by modern writers on similar topics.
Though the French writer was beyond all doubt not familiar with the
Grecian writers and knew nothing of Xenophon, there is a constant
reminder of the Greek historian in his work. Xenophon's simple
directness, his thorough-going sincerity, the impression he produces
of absolute good faith and confidence in the completeness of the
picture, so that one feels that one has been present almost at many of
the scenes described, are all to be encountered in his medieval
successor. Villehardouin went far ahead of his predecessors, the
chroniclers of foregoing centuries, in his careful devotion to truth.
A French writer has declared that to Villehardouin must be ascribed
the foundation of historical probity. None of his facts, stated as
such, has ever been impugned, and though his long speeches must
necessarily have been his own composition, there seems no doubt that
they contain the ideas which had been expressed on various occasions,
and besides were composed with due reference to the character of the
speaker and convey something of his special style of expression.
Prof. Saintsbury in his article in the Encyclopedia Britannica on
Villehardouin, sums up very strikingly the place that this first great
vernacular historian's book must occupy.
He says: "It is not impertinent, and at the same time an excuse for
what has been already said, to repeat that Villehardouin's book,
brief as it is, is in reality one of the capital books of literature,
not merely for its merit, but because it is the most authentic and the
most striking embodiment in the contemporary literature of the
sentiments which determined the action of a great and important period
of history. There are but very few books which hold this position,
and Villehardouin's is one of them. If every other contemporary
record of the crusades perished, we should still be able by aid of this
to understand and realize what the mental attitude of crusaders, of
Teutonic Knights, and the rest was, and without this we should lack
the earliest, the most undoubtedly genuine, and the most
characteristic of all such records. The very inconsistency with which
Villehardouin is chargeable, the absence of compunction with which he
relates the changing of a sacred religious pilgrimage into something by
no means unlike a mere filibustering raid on a great scale, add a charm
to the book. For, religious as it is, it is entirely free from the
very slightest touch of hypocrisy or, indeed, of self-consciousness
of any kind. The famous description of the Crusades, gesta Dei per
Francos, was evidently to Villehardouin a plain matter-of-fact
description and it no more occurred to him to doubt the divine favor
being extended to the expeditions against Alexius or Theodore than to
doubt that it was shown to expeditions against Saracens and Turks."
It was especially in the exploitation of biographical material that the
Thirteenth Century chroniclers were at their best. Any one who
recalls Carlyle's unstinted admiration of Jocelyn of Brakelonds'
life of Abbot Sampson in his essays Past and Present, will be sure
that at least one writer in England had succeeded in pleasing so
difficult a critic in this rather thorny mode of literary expression.
It is easy to say too much or too little about the virtues and the
vices of a man whose biography one has chosen to write. Jocelyn's
simple, straightforward story would seem to fulfil the best canons of
modern criticism in this respect. Probably no more vivid picture of a
man and his ways was ever given until Boswell's Johnson. Nor was
the English chronicler alone in this respect. The Sieur de
Joinville's biographical studies of the life of Louis IX. furnish
another example of this literary mode at its best, and modern writers
of biography could not do better than go back to read these intimate
pictures of the life of a great king, which are not flattered nor
overdrawn but give us the man as he actually was.
The English biographic chronicler of the olden time could picture
exciting scenes without any waste of words. A specimen of his work
will serve to show the merit of his style. After reading it one is not
likely to be surprised that Carlyle should have so taken the
Chronicler to heart nor been so enthusiastic in his praise. It is the
very type of that impressionism in style that has once more in the
course of time become the fad of our own day.
"The abbot was informed that the church of Woolpit was vacant,
Walter of Coutances being chosen to the bishopric of Lincoln. He
presently convened the prior and great part of the convent, and taking
up his story thus began: 'You well know what trouble I had in
respect of the church of Woolpit; and in order that it should be
obtained for your exclusive use I journeyed to Rome at your instance,
in the time of the schism between Pope Alexander and Octavian. I
passed through Italy at that time when all clerks bearing letters of
our lord the Pope Alexander were taken. Some were imprisoned, some
hanged, and some, with nose and lips cut off, sent forward to the
pope, to his shame and confusion. I, however, pretended to be
Scotch; and putting on the garb of a Scotchman, and the gesture of
one, I often brandished my staff, in the way they use that weapon
called a gaveloc, at those who mocked me, using threatening language,
after the manner of the Scotch. To those that met and questioned me
as to who I was, I answered nothing, but, "Ride ride Rome,
turne Cantwereberei." This did I to conceal myself and my errand,
and that I should get to Rome safer in the guise of a Scotchman.
"'Having obtained letters from the pope, even as I wished, on my
return I passed by a certain castle, as my way led me from the city;
and behold the officers thereof came about me, laying hold upon me,
and saying, "This vagabond who makes himself out to be a Scotchman
is either a spy or bears letters from the false pope Alexander." And
while they examined my ragged clothes, and my boots, and my breeches,
and even the old shoes which I carried over my shoulders, after the
fashion of the Scotch, I thrust my hand into the little wallet which
I carried, wherein was contained the letter of our lord the pope,
placed under a little cup I had for drinking. The Lord God and
St. Edmund so permitting, I drew out both the letter and the cup
together, so that, extending my arm aloft, I held the letter
underneath the cup. They could see the cup plain enough, but they did
not see the letter; and so I got clear out of their hands, in the
name of the Lord. Whatever money I had about me they took away;
therefore I had to beg from door to door, without any payment, until
I arrived in England.'"
Another excellent example of the biographic prose of the century,
though this is the vernacular, is Joinville's life of St. Louis,
without doubt one of the precious biographical treasures of all times.
It contains a vivid portrait of Louis IX., made by a man who knew
him well personally, took part with him in some of the important
actions of the book, and in general was an active personage in the
affairs of the time. Those who think that rapid picturesque
description such as vividly recalls deeds of battle was reserved for the
modern war correspondent, should read certain portions of Joinville's
book. As an example we have ventured to quote the page on which the
seneschal historian himself recounts the role which he played in the
famous battle of Mansourah, at which, with the Count de Soissons
and Pierre de Neuville, he defended a small bridge against the enemy
under a hail of arrows.
He says: "Before us there were two sergeants of the king, one of
whom was named William de Boon and the other John of Gamaches.
Against these the Turks who had placed themselves between the river
and the little tributary, led a whole mob of villains on foot, who
hurled at them clods of turf or whatever came to hand. Never could
they make them recoil upon us, however. As a last resort the Turks
sent forward a foot soldier
who three times launched Greek fire at them. Once William de Boon
received the pot of green fire upon his buckler. If the fire had
touched anything on him he would have been entirely burned up. We at
the rear were all covered by arrows which had missed the Sergeants.
It happened that I found a waistcoat which had been stuffed by one of
the Saracens. I turned the open side of it towards me and made a
shield out of the vest which rendered me great service, for I was
wounded by their arrows in only five places though my horse was wounded
in fifteen. One of my own men brought me a banner with my arms and a
lance. Every time then that we saw that they were pressing the Royal
Sergeants we charged upon them and they fled. The good Count
Soissons, from the point at which we were, joked with me and said
'Senechal, let us hoot out this rabble, for by the headdress of God
(this was his favorite oath) we shall talk over this day you and I
many a time in our ladies' halls.'"
We have said that the writing of the Thirteenth Century must have
been done to a great extent for the sake of the women of the time, and
that its very existence was a proof that the women possessed a degree of
culture, that might not be realized from the few details that have been
preserved to us of their education and habits of life. In this last
passage of Joinville we have the proof of this, since evidently the
telling of the stories of these days of battle was done mainly in order
that the women folks might have their share in the excitement of the
campaign, and might be enabled vividly to appreciate what the dangers
had been and how gloriously their lords had triumphed. At every period
of the world's history it was true that literature was mainly made for
women and that some of the best portions of it always concerned them
very closely.
We have purposely left till last, the greatest of the chroniclers of
the Thirteenth Century, Matthew Paris, the Author of the
Historia Major, who owes his surname doubtless to the fact that he
was educated at the University of Paris. Instead of trying to tell
anything about him from our own slight personal knowledge, we prefer to
quote the passage from Green's History of the English People, in
which one of the greatest of our modern English historians pays such a
magnificent tribute to his colleague of the earlier times:
"The story of this period of misrule has been preserved for us by an
annalist whose pages glow with the new outburst of patriotic feeling
which this common expression of the people and the clergy had produced.
Matthew Paris is the greatest, as he is in reality the last of our
monastic historians. The school of St. Albans survived indeed till
a far later time, but the writers dwindle into mere annalists whose
view is bounded by the Abbey precincts, and whose work is as colorless
as it is jejune. In Matthew the breadth and precision of the
narrative, the copiousness of his information on topics whether
national or European, the general fairness and justice of his
comments, are only surpassed by the patriotic fire and enthusiasm of
the whole. He had succeeded Roger of Wendover as Chronicler of
St. Albans; and the Greater Chronicle, with the abridgement of it
which has long passed under the name of Matthew of Westminster, a
"History of the English," and the "Lives of the Earlier
Abbots," were only a few among the voluminous works which attest his
prodigious industry. He was an eminent artist as well as a historian,
and many of the manuscripts which are preserved are illustrated by his
own hand. A large circle of correspondents -- bishops like
Grosseteste, ministers like Hubert de Burgh, officials like
Alexander de Swinford -- furnished him with minute accounts of
political and ecclesiastical proceedings. Pilgrims from the East and
Papal agents brought news of foreign events to his scriptorium at St.
Albans. He had access to and quotes largely from state documents,
charters, and exchequer rolls. The frequency of the royal visits to
the abbey brought him a store of political intelligence and Henry
himself contributed to the great chronicle which has preserved with so
terrible a faithfulness the memory of his weakness and misgovernment.
On one solemn feast-day the King recognized Matthew, and bidding
him sit on the middle step between the floor and the throne, begged him
to write the story of the day's proceedings. While on a visit to
St. Albans he invited him to his table and chamber, and enumerated
by name two hundred and fifty of the English barons for his
information. But all this royal patronage has left little mark on his
work. "The case," as he says, "of historical writers is hard,
for if they tell the truth they provoke men, and if they write what is
false they offend God." With all the fullness of the school of court
historians, such as Benedict or Hoveden, Matthew Paris combines an
independence and patriotism which is strange to their pages. He
denounces with the same unsparing energy the oppression of the Papacy
and the King. His point of view is neither that of a courtier nor of
a Churchman, but of an Englishman, and the new national tone of his
chronicle is but an echo of the national sentiment which at last bound
nobles and yeomen and Churchmen together into an English people."
We of the Twentieth Century are a people of information and
encyclopedias rather than of literature, so that we shall surely
appreciate one important specimen of the prose writing of the
Thirteenth Century since it comprises the first modern encyclopedia.
Its author was the famous Vincent of Beauvais. Vincent consulted
all the authors, sacred and profane, that he could possibly lay hands
on, and the number of them was indeed prodigious. It has often been
said by men supposed to be authorities in history, that the historians
of the Middle Ages had at their disposition only a small number of
books, and that above all they were not familiar with the older
historians. While this was true as regards the Greek, it was not for
the Latin historical writers. Vincent of Beauvais has quotations
from Caesar's De Bello Gallico, from Sallust's Catiline and
Jugurtha, from Quintus Curtius, from Suetonius and from Valerius
Maximus and finally from Justin's Abridgement of Trogus Pompeius.
Vincent had the advantage of having at his disposition the numerous
libraries of the monasteries throughout France, the extent of which,
usually unrealized in modern times, will be appreciated from our
special chapter on the subject. Besides he consulted the documents in
the chapter houses of the Cathedrals especially those of Paris, of
Rouen, of Laon, of Beauvais and of Bayeux, which were
particularly rich in collections of documents. It might be thought
that these libraries and archives would be closely guarded. Far from
being closed to writers from the outer world they were accessible to all
to such an extent, indeed, that a number of them are mentioned by
Vincent as public institutions. His method of collecting his
information is interesting, because it shows the system employed by him
is practically that which has obtained down to our own day. He made
use for his immense investigation of a whole army of young assistants,
most of whom were furnished him by his own order, the Dominicans. He
makes special mention in a number of places of quotations due to their
collaboration. The costliness of maintaining such a system would have
made the completion of the work absolutely impossible were it not for
the liberality of King Louis IX., who generously offered to defray
the expenses of the composition. Vincent has acknowledged this by
declaring in his prefatorial letter to the King that, "you have
always liberally given assistance even to the work of gathering the
materials."
Vincent's method of writing is quite as interesting as his method of
compilation of facts. The great Dominican was not satisfied with
being merely a source of information. The philosophy of history has
received its greatest Christian contribution from St. Augustine's
City of God. In this an attempt was made to trace the meaning and
causal sequence of events as well as their mere external connection and
place in time. In a lesser medieval way Vincent tried deliberately to
imitate this and besides writing history attempted to trace the
philosophy of it. For him, as for the great French philosophic
historian Bossuet in his Universal History five centuries later,
everything runs its provided race from the creation to the redemption
and then on toward the consummation of the world. He describes at
first the commencements of the Church from the time of Abel, through
its progress under the Patriarchs, the Prophets, Judges, Kings,
and leaders of the people, down to the Birth of Christ. He traces
the history of the Apostles and of the first Disciples, though he
makes it a point to find place for the famous deeds of the great men of
Pagan antiquity. He notes the commencement of Empires and
Kingdoms, their glory, their decadence, their ruin, and the
Sovereigns who made them illustrious in peace and war. There was much
that was defective in the details of history as they were traced by
Vincent, much that was lacking in completeness, but the intention was
evidently the best, and patience and labor were devoted to the sources
of history at his command. Perhaps never more than at the present
moment have we been in a position to realize that history at its best
can be so full of defects even after further centuries of consultation
of documents and printed materials, that we are not likely to be in the
mood to blame this first modern historian very much. As for the other
portions of his encyclopedia, biographic, literary and scientific,
they were not only freely consulted by his contemporaries and
successors, but we find traces of their influence in the writings and
also in the decorative work of the next two centuries. We have already
spoken of the use of his book in the provision of subjects for the
ornamentation of Cathedrals and the same thing might be said of
edifices of other kinds.
Nor must it be thought that Vincent has only a historic or
ecclesiastical interest. Dr. Julius Pagel, in his Chapter on
Medicine in the Middle Ages in Puschmann's Hand-Book of the
History of Medicine,[20] says, "that there were three writers
whose works were even more popular than those of Albertus Magnus.
These three were Bartholomew, the Englishman; Thomas, of
Cantimprato, and Vincent, of Beauvais, the last of whom must be
considered as one of the most important contributors to the
generalization of scientific knowledge, not alone in the Thirteenth
but in the immediately succeeding centuries. His most important work
was really an encyclopedia of the knowledge of his time. It was called
the Greater Triple Mirror and there is no doubt that it reflected the
knowledge of his period. He had the true scientific spirit and
constantly cites the authorities from whom his information was derived.
He cites hundreds of authors and there is scarcely a subject that he
does not touch on. One book of his work is concerned with human
anatomy, and the concluding portion of it is an abbreviation of history
carried down to the year 1250."
It might be considered that such a compend of information would be very
dry-as-dust reading and that it would be fragmentary in character and
little likely to be attractive except to a serious student. Dr.
Pagel's opinion does not agree with this a priori impression. He
says with regard to it: "The language is clear, readily
intelligible, and the information is conveyed usually in an excellent,
simple style. Through the introduction of interesting similes the
contents do not lack a certain taking quality, so that the reading of
the work easily becomes absorbing." This is, I suppose, almost the
last thing that might be expected of a scientific teacher in the
Thirteenth Century, because, after all, Vincent of Beauvais must
be considered as one of the schoolmen, and they are supposed to be
eminently arid, but evidently, if we are to trust this testimony of a
modern German physician, only by those who have not taken the trouble
to read them.
One of the most important works of Thirteenth Century prose is the
well-known Rationale Divinorum Officiorum (Significance of the
Divine Offices) written by William Durandus, the Bishop of
Mende, in France, whose tomb and its inscription in the handsome old
Gothic Cathedral of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva, in Rome, shares
with the body of St. Catherine of Sienna the honor of attracting so
many visitors. The book has been translated into English under the
title, The Symbolism of Churches and Church Ornaments, and has
been very widely read. It was very popular in the Thirteenth
Century, and the best possible idea of its subsequent reputation can
be gathered from the fact, that the Rationale was the first work from
the pen of an uninspired writer to be accorded the privilege of being
printed. The Editio Princeps, a real first edition of supreme
value, appeared from the press of John Fust in 1459. The only
other books that had been printed at that time were the Psalters of
1457 and 1459. This edition is, of course, of the most
extreme rarity. According to the English translators of Durandus the
beauty of the typography has seldom been exceeded.
The style of Durandus has been praised very much by the critics of
succeeding centuries for its straightforwardness, simplicity and
brevity. Most of these qualities it evidently owes to the hours spent
by its author in the reading of Holy Scriptures. Durandus fashioned
his style so much on the sacred writings that most of his book possesses
something of the impressive character of the Bible itself. The
impression derived from it is that of reading a book on a religious
subject written in an eminently suitable tone and spirit. Most of this
impression must be attributed without doubt to the fact, that Durandus
has not only formed his style on the Scriptures, but has actually
incorporated Scriptural expressions in his writings to such an extent
as to make them mostly a scriptural composition. This, far from being
a fault, appears quite appropriate in his book because of its subject
and the method of treatment. A quotation from the proeme (as it is in
the quaint spelling of the English translation) will give the best
idea of this.
"All things, as pertain to offices and matters ecclesiastical, be
full of divine significations and mysterious, and overflow with
celestial sweetness; if so be that a man be diligent in his study of
them, and know how to draw HONEY FROM THE ROCK, AND
OIL FROM THE HARDEST STONE. But who
KNOWETH THE ORDINANCES OF HEAVEN, OR
CAN FIX THE REASONS THEREOF UPON THE
EARTH? for he that prieth into their majesty, is overwhelmed by
the glory of them. Of a truth THE WELL IS DEEP, AND
I HAVE NOTHING TO DRAW WITH: unless he giveth it
unto me WHO GIVETH TO ALL MEN LIBERALLY,
AND UPERAIDETH NOT: so that WHILE I
JOURNEY THROUGH THE MOUNTAINS I may DRAW
WATER WITH JOY OUT OF THE WELLS OF
SALVATION. Wherefore albeit of the things handed down from
our forefathers, capable we are not to explain all, yet if among them
there be any thing which is done without reason it should be forthwith
put away. Wherefore, I, WILLIAM, by the alone tender mercy
of God, Bishop of the Holy Church which is in Mende, will knock
diligently at the door, if so be that THE KEY OF DAVID
will open unto me: that the King may BRING ME INTO HIS
TREASURE? and shew unto me the heavenly pattern which was
shewed unto Moses in the mount so that I may learn those things which
pertain to Rites Ecclesiastical whereof they teach and what they
signify: and that I may be able plainly to reveal and make manifest
the reasons of them, by HIS help, WHO HATH ORDAINED
STRENGTH OUT OF THE MOUTH OF BABES AND
SUCKLINGS: WHOSE SPIRITS BLOWETH WHERE
IT LISTETH: DIVIDING TO EACH SEVERALLY
AS IT WILL to the praise and glory of the Trinity."
This passage alone of Durandus would serve as an excellent refutation
of the old-time Protestant tradition, fortunately now dying out
though not as yet entirely eradicated, which stated so emphatically
that the Bible was not allowed to be read before Luther's time.
Those who wish to obtain a good idea of Durandus' style and the way
he presents his material, can obtain it very well from his chapter on
Bells, the first two paragraphs of which we venture to quote. They
will be found quite as full of interesting information in their way as
any modern writer might have brought together, and have the dignity and
simplicity of the best modern prose.
"Bells are brazen vessels, and were first invented in Nola, a city
of Campania. Wherefore the larger bells are called Campanae, from
Campania the district, and the smaller Nolae, from Nola the town.
"You must know that bells, by the sound of which the people
assembleth together to the church to hear, and the Clergy to preach,
IN THE MORNING THE MERCY OF GOD AND HIS
POWER BY NIGHT do signify the silver trumpets, by which
under the Old Law the people was called together unto sacrifice.
(Of these trumpets we shall speak in our Sixth Book.) For just as
the watchmen in a camp rouse one another by trumpets, so do the
Ministers of the Church excite each other by the sound of bells to
watch the livelong night against the plots of the Devil. Wherefore
our brazen bells are more sonorous than the trumpets of the Old Law,
because then GOD was known in Judea only, but now in the whole
earth. They be also more durable: For they signify that the teaching
of the New Testament will be more lasting than the trumpets and
sacrifices of the Old Law, namely, even unto the end of the world.
"Again bells do signify preachers, who ought after the likeness of a
bell to exhort the faithful unto faith: the which was typified in that
the LORD commanded Moses to make a vestment for the High Priest
who entered into the Holy of Holies. Also the cavity of the bell
denoteth the mouth of the preacher, according to the saying of the
Apostle, I AM BECOME AS SOUNDING BRASS ON A
TINKLING CYMBAL."
Of course there are what we would be apt to consider exaggerations of
symbolic meanings and far-fetched explanations and references, but
this was of the taste of the time and has not in subsequent centuries
been so beyond the canons of good taste as at present. Durandus goes
on to tell that the hardness of the metal of the bell signifies
fortitude in the mind of the preacher, that the wood of the frame on
which the bell hangeth doth signify the wood of our Lord's Cross,
that the rope by which the bell is strung is humility and also showeth
the measure of life, that the ring in the length of the rope is the
crown of reward for perseverance unto the end, and then proceeds to
show why and how often the bells are rung and what the significance of
each ringing is. He explains why the bells are silent for three days
before Easter and also during times of interdict, and gives as the
justification for this last the quotation from the Prophet "I
WILL MAKE THY TONGUE CLEAVE TO THE ROOF
OF THY MOUTH FOR THEY ARE A REBELLIOUS
HOUSE."
Even these few specimens of the prose of the Thirteenth Century,
will serve to show that the writers of the period could express
themselves with a vigor and directness which have made their books
interesting reading for generations long after their time, and which
stamp their authors as worthy of a period that found enduring and
adequate modes of expression for every form of thought and feeling.
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