LIFE OF ALCUINCHAPTER II.
ALCUIN’S RESIDENCE DURING EIGHT YEARS
AT THE COURT OF CHARLEMAGNE. AD 782-790.
1.—Of the State of Civilization in the Kingdom of France.
AT the period of the conquest of Gaul by the Franks, the natives were
far superior to their conquerors in intellectual cultivation. The permanent
footing which the victors obtained had, however, no influence in refining their
manners; and their adoption of the Christian religion contributed less to
eradicate their barbarism than to increase their superstition. Instead of the
new settlers acquiring a share of civilization, the natives assimilated themselves
to them more than the Romans had done to other tribes of Germany, by whom they
had been subdued. In times when religion forms the sole subject of mental
interest, we can judge of the general state of civilization by the condition of
the priests. From the moment that the Franks began to aspire to high dignities
in the church, such a degeneracy of manners prevailed amongst the superior
clergy, that we should scarcely credit the accounts of the ignorance and
scandalous practices of many ecclesiastics, were they not recorded by Gregory
himself. Intemperance in drinking, perjury, debauchery, adultery, and the most
abominable cruelties were as common among the bishops as among the rest of the
Franks.
The contagion of their evil example spread among the inferior clergy;
and had not some resisted the general depravity, and distinguished themselves
by lives strict in proportion to the profligacy of the rest, or had not
ignorance and barbarism of the times been so great that the most absurd
superstitions found a ready acceptance, it would be difficult for us to
conceive how a religion could continue to be held in estimation, whose
ministers surpassed other men not in virtue but in vice. The lives of the
clergy being subject to no inspection, they sank still lower throughout the
whole Christian world during the restless and warlike times when the sceptre
was transferred from the enfeebled line of the Merovingian house to the more
vigorous hand of the race of Charlemagne.
A system, therefore, such as Popery developed itself in its
commencement, was a positive benefit to the middle ages. In the warmth with
which Popery is both attacked and defended, it is but too often overlooked,
that there was a time when it was beneficial to mankind, as well as a time when
it degenerated through the abuse of its power, and ripened for the destruction
connected with the accomplishment of its objects. Every human expedient is the
result only of peculiar exigencies; and no sooner does it cease to be necessary
than it loses its importance, which no means, however artfully contrived, can
restore. Were the Roman hierarchy now surrounded even by an army of Jesuits, we
need not dread the thunders of the Vatican. The depravity of the clergy,
however, proves how necessary it was in those days to create an authority
distinct from the temporal power to control their lives; and we shall see
hereafter, that, in the thorough reform undertaken by Charlemagne he was
induced to favour the Hierarchy from a conviction of its necessity.
Charles Martel had imposed military service on the church, as well as on
the other fiefs, and left it to the choice of the ecclesiastics either to
resign their temporalities, or to perform the obligations under which they held
them. The greater part preferred retaining them by this disgraceful tenure, to
the alternative of being deprived of their possessions. Charles Martel even
rewarded many of his adherents for their services in battle, with lands and
offices belonging to the church, and appointed bishops who had neither capacity
for their charge, nor any conception of its dignity. Although, through the zeal
of St. Boniface, some of the most unworthy were displaced in the following
reign, yet these solitary instances had little effect on the whole system. To
reform abuses so enormous, required all the power and vigour of a man like
Charlemagne.
2.—Charlemagne.
At the time when Einhard wrote the life of Charlemagne he was unable to
meet with anyone who could furnish him with information respecting the birth,
childhood, and youth of his hero; and he deemed it absurd to hand down
unauthenticated reports to posterity. Surprising as is this confession, it will
appear less strange when we reflect, that Einhard resided at Charles’s court
only during the latter part of his reign; and that he did not enjoy that
intimacy with the monarch which has been recorded by history, from the
tradition of his amour with the pretended daughter of the king. Probably, at
that period, he had not begun to entertain the idea of writing the life of
Charles, or he could certainly have found no difficulty in collecting the
necessary materials; and when afterwards, in the seclusion of a cloister, he
availed himself of his leisure to prosecute the work, whose classical style
exhibits the most convincing proof of the impulse given by Charles’s
institutions to the national civilization; much, perhaps, had escaped his
memory or seemed to him not sufficiently authentic to be incorporated into a
description, which, while it paints such a character in the most glowing colours,
should represent only the true features. This assertion of a contemporary must
not, therefore, deter us from availing ourselves of the account given by
Einhard, and other authors, to produce a sketch of the early education of Charles.
He was brought up after the ordinary manner of the French nobility, being
taught the use of arms, and the usual athletic exercises of hunting, riding,
and swimming. Intellectual cultivation was considered of so little importance
for the future sovereign of a warlike people, that he did not even learn to
write; and, notwithstanding all the pains which he took in after life to supply
the deficiency, he could never attain to a ready and skilful use of the pens.
Neither was he in his youth instructed in the Latin language; he understood it,
indeed, as it was then commonly spoken in Gaul, but not according to rule, and
the usage of the ancient Latin authors. He endeavored, at a more advanced age,
to remedy this defect also of his education; and, if we may believe his
biographers, not without success. In conversation, where inaccuracies are less
striking, he, perhaps, made himself understood with as much facility as he
understood others; but the difficulty he experienced in expressing himself in
writing, is evident from a letter which he wrote from his camp at Ens to his wife Fastrada, in 791.
The rest of his letters, which are in a better and more easy style, were either
composed by others to whom he communicated his ideas, or were examined and
corrected by some learned friend, as were the French works of Frederick the
Great.
Although his education was not calculated to develop his literary
talents, it did not, at all events, stifle his nobler qualities; and it
required only an external stimulus and excitement to kindle in him that ardent
desire for knowledge, which he afterwards endeavored to satisfy amid the tumult
of war, and when harassed by circumstances the most intricate, and business the
most urgent. Deterred by the fearful example of others, he early learnt to shun
excess and intemperance; and throughout his whole life, not only practiced
moderation himself and introduced it into his family and household, but also
issued salutary edicts against drunkenness, in order to eradicate that deeply
rooted propensity of the Germans. His vigorous understanding, and his mind,
naturally susceptible of all that was great and beautiful, found in the
circumstances of his early youth ample materials for serious reflection and
noble resolutions. We must remember how readily the young mind embraces all
that is presented to it, and how deep and permanent is the impression of
everything which really awakens the imagination, in order to be able properly
to estimate the effect produced on the youthful Charles by his father’s
accession to the Merovingian throne, and his own consecration and coronation by
Pope Stephen the Third.
As Charles increased in years, and especially after he had ascended the
throne, he felt more and more keenly the want of education, both in himself and
all who surrounded him. A monarch possessing a mind less exalted than his,
would, in his situation, have protected the ignorance which he so strenuously
sought to banish, and would have despised in others that in which he himself
had no participation; but his sentiments were far too noble to admit of his
adopting such a course, and he endeavored rather to remove the causes to which
this deficiency in civilization was to be attributed. His first step was to
restore the court school, wherein the princes and sons of the nobility had
formerly been educated, but which had been neglected during the tumult of the
late tempestuous times. In consequence, however, of the deficiency of competent
persons to establish any regular system, he was compelled to have recourse to
foreigners. On his return from his first expedition across the Alps, in the
year 774, he brought with him two learned Italians, the deacon Paul, author of
the history of Lombardy, and Peter, A.M. of Pisa. He appointed Peter master of
the court school, and himself received instruction from him in the Latin
grammar : probably, he either died soon afterwards or was incompetent to his
situation, as the establishment made no progress until the arrival of Alcuin.
3.—Alcuin as Instructor to the King and Royal Family.
Alcuin arrived in France in the year 782, for the purpose of undertaking
the management of the court school, the instruction of the king, and the
education of the princes and princesses. In the same year, the Saxon rebellion
commenced such a series of important and complicated political events, that it
seems inconceivable how Charles could snatch a moment from the cares of state
to devote to literary objects. Two years of undisturbed tranquillity among the
Saxons, had induced Charles to believe that he might venture to introduce
French regulations among them. Accordingly, he commenced by ordering a general
levy of the Saxon troops; no sooner, however, did the Saxons see themselves
collected in considerable numbers, with arms in their hands, than the general
feeling of hatred produced the determination of turning them, not against the
enemies of the Franks, but against the Franks themselves. The cruel severity
with which Charles punished this mutiny of the soldiers, united the whole body
of Saxons against him. Two sanguinary engagements, the only pitched battles
fought in this tedious war, distinguished the following year (783); and though
the Saxons were compelled to quit the field, from the superior discipline of
their opponents, they continued, in separate parties, to make such an obstinate
resistance, that Charles did not venture to lay aside his arms during the whole
of the summer and winter of 784-5; and it was only by dreadful and barbarous
devastation of the country, and by winning over some of the principal people by
flattery and condescension, that he was at length enabled to reduce the chiefs,
and afterwards the people, to submission. The repose thus obtained was not of
long duration. Duke Arigis of Beneventum, confiding
in the distance at which his territories were placed from those of France, in
the number and strength of his fortresses, and still more in his alliance with
the Greeks, who were desirous of restoring to the throne of Lombardy the son of
Desiderius, who had taken refuge at Constantinople, assumed an independence
which obliged the king to cross the Alps. Charles knew well how to estimate and
to overcome the difficulties annexed to a campaign in lower Italy. Had he
determined, as usual, upon leading the army, not till after the May-meeting,
across the Alps, he would have reached Beneventum in a season when the heat
would have rendered all military operations impracticable, or have produced
sickness among the troops; but so great was his authority, or the readiness of
the Franks to serve him, that he commenced his march towards Italy in the
autumn of 786. The Duke of Beneventum had, in his calculations, overlooked the
power and abilities of his great opponent; and when, early in the spring of
787, Charles suddenly entered his dominions, he was so completely taken by
surprise that he was glad to purchase the clemency of the victor by submission.
Charles accepted his offers of subjection; but not till he had made a
sufficient display of his power to ensure obedience. No sooner, however, had he
recrossed the Alps for the purpose of chastising the duke of Bavaria for the
part taken by him in this design against France, than Arigis,
having entered into fresh negotiations with the Greeks, projected a scheme that
might have proved dangerous to the Frank supremacy in Italy and Germany, had it
been as skilfully executed as it was ably conceived. It was concerted that the Bavarians and Avars on the one side, and the Greeks with the Lombards
on the other, should rise simultaneously; while it was expected that the Saxons
would not fail to profit by this favourable moment to shake off the yoke of
oppression. The decision and good fortune of Charles, however, hurled back upon
the author the blow aimed at the Franks. The untimely death of the duke of
Beneventum, and the wise measures adopted by Charles, frustrated the landing of
the Greeks in Italy; and the second participation of Thassilo in this treasonable alliance was punished by the deposition of the duke, and
the extinction of the dukedom of Bavaria. The Avars, who, according to the
stipulations, invaded the French territories, encountered, in Charles, an
irresistible opponent, and involved themselves in a war which led to their
political annihilation. The Saxons, so far from venturing on any hostile
movement, accompanied the king in a campaign which he undertook the following
year, 789, against the Sclavonians, a people
inhabiting the right bank of the Elbe. He looked upon this river as the natural
eastern boundary of his kingdom, and endeavored to secure it, not only by
erecting fortresses, but by reducing the Sclavonians on the opposite bank to subjection.
It was during these troublous times, that
Alcuin first took up his abode at the court of France, and commenced his labours
for the mental improvement of the king, the royal family, and the people. One
cannot but admire, with Alcuin, the noble mind and extraordinary activity of
Charles, and acknowledge the superiority of a man who, in the midst of so many
distracting political cares and warlike operations, could occupy himself with
literary pursuits, the value of which was at that time far from being generally
acknowledged. It was only by scrupulously availing himself of every moment,
that he could find time for these various employments. Even during his meals,
he never failed to introduce either reading or instructive conversation. The
political constitution of France was so organized that it allowed the king to
pass the winter months in tranquillity in the bosom of his family; and if
extraordinary circumstances obliged him to keep the field during that season,
as he was compelled to do from the year 784 to 785, he required his family to
join him. He had therefore nearly eight winter months to spend in intercourse
with Alcuin, and in literary occupations. What the subjects of study were, and
how they were treated of in those times, we may best learn from Alcuin’s works;
and as the importance of learning to the state and church of France was first
recognized by Charles, the institutions established for its propagation would
naturally adopt the views which Alcuin as teacher, and Charles as learner,
might entertain. In his commentary on the Book of Ecclesiastes, Alcuin speaks
of the division of the then known sciences. According to him, they are divided
into Ethics, Physics, and Theology, and were really taught in the order in
which they are here placed. This is more clearly explained in a discourse
between himself and two of his pupils, to be found in the Introduction to his
grammar. The students desire to be conducted to the higher branches of
learning, and to behold the seven degrees of theoretic doctrine, so often
promised. The teacher points out to them, Grammar, Rhetoric, Dialectic,
Arithmetic, Geometry, Music, and Astronomy, or, as it was then called,
Astrology: The first three (afterwards called the Trivium) formed the Ethics of
Alcuin, and the four others, or the Quadrivium, the Physics: these two parts
were only preparatory studies for the highest of all, Theology. The knowledge
of these sciences was to form and strengthen the mind for the understanding of
the true faith, and to protect it against the erroneous doctrines of heretics.
There are still extant manuals by Alcuin, especially on the various
branches of ethics, which enable us to describe his mode of treating them. As
far as regards the first part of the Trivium, Grammar, he adopts the form of a
conversation between two students, a Saxon and a Frank, who receive from their
master information on those points which they do not comprehend. Latin was not,
in those days, in the same degree as at present, a dead language: it was still
spoken in several parts of the Frank kingdom, and constantly used in all public
transactions, and also in the church. A grammar written at that period, must
necessarily be purely practical. In our schools Latin is considered the best
medium of instruction for young people; because it unites in itself the double
advantage of being the best means of developing the understanding in a logical
manner, and of imparting at the same time the knowledge of a foreign language.
None of the modern languages, which, on account of their practical utility, the
philanthropist would wish to substitute for it, can supply what the Latin affords.
Whoever is well grounded in Latin, may readily acquire a knowledge of all the
modern tongues; less because some of them are derived from it, than because a
mind which has been strengthened by the study of the Latin grammar, only
requires a little practice, in order to comprehend the peculiarities of a
modern language, and to use it with facility. But in Alcuin’s times, Latin was
not learned so perfectly, nor with this view; and his grammar is consequently
nothing more than a system of forms. (He treats of single words and their
forms, without specifying how they are to be used in the construction of a
sentence.) We do not find anything that is necessary to be known, omitted :
still, we cannot but disapprove the inconvenient arrangement, and want of accuracy
in the definitions.
The beginning of the section on prepositions, may serve as an example.
To the question, “What is a preposition?” the answer is, “An indeclinable part
of speech”. Here, an accidental outward form is made the principal characteristic,
and is so much the less accurate, as there are many other words besides
prepositions which are indeclinable. Equally defective is the reply to the
second question on the use of the prepositions, “They must be placed before
other parts of speech, either by being compounded with, or united to them”. A
peculiarity like this can only be a sign, not a definition; and, besides, this
explanation excludes all the prepositions that are placed after their cases.
Alcuin’s grammar is evidently written more for the memory than the
understanding. The examples are selected from the classics, most of them from
Virgil; some from Terence, Juvenal, Lucan, and Cicero.
An appendix to the grammar treats of orthography. It is no small merit
in Alcuin, that he recommended by his example, and facilitated by his
instructions, accuracy in the transcription of books. (But for him, many of the
manuscripts of the middle ages would have been still more defective than they
are.) He is, therefore, entitled to the thanks of the whole of western Europe,
whose high degree of cultivation and enlightenment is derived from those works
of antiquity preserved by the care and diligence of the monks. In the monastery
of St. Martin of Tours, of which Alcuin afterwards became abbot, a room called The
Museum was specially appropriated to the transcribers. On the walls, verses
were written strictly enjoining them to avoid inserting any words not warranted
by the original, but founded only on their own ideas, and cautioning them
against too great rapidity in writing. They were also recommended to make the
proper breaks, and to be careful of the right punctuation. For this purpose,
Alcuin had written a book on orthography, of which there remains only an
abstract made by a monk of Saltzburg, for the use of
himself and others. It contains a short list, alphabetically arranged,
principally of such words as are sounded alike but spelt differently, of
synonymous and irregular verbs.
The grammar acquainted the learner simply with words; the formation of
sentences was taught by Logic in the most extended sense of the term, which
naturally divides itself into two parts; Rhetoric, or the art of convincing
others, and Dialectic, or the art of distinguishing truth from falsehood.
The subject of Rhetoric is discussed in a dialogue between Charlemagne
and Alcuin; the questions of the king serving to elicit the principles of the
teacher. The treatise is entirely confined to forensic eloquence; and as the
rules are taken from the Romans, so also do their principles of jurisprudence
form the groundwork of this composition. It would have been an invaluable
treasure, had it described to us the actual proceedings in a Frank court of
justice, instead of representing the litigations which the ancient rhetoricians
had partly invented, and partly taken from real life and from history. In those
times, when simple cases were easily decided, and the more complicated
submitted to the judgment of God, such a system of rhetoric was of no practical
importance; but it was calculated to give acuteness and precision to the
understanding, and accustomed the student to express himself with ease and
fluency. At the conclusion of the treatise is a short discourse on the virtues.
Here, also, Alcuin retains the classification of the ancient philosophers, but
with an adaptation to the ideas of Christianity. This appears to me
sufficiently interesting to deserve a literal quotation. “I wonder”, observes
the king, “that we Christians should so often depart from virtue, though we
have eternal glory promised as its recompense by Jesus Christ, who is Truth
itself; whilst the heathen philosophers steadily pursued it merely on account
of its intrinsic worth, and for the sake of fame”.
Alcuin.—“We must rather deplore than wonder, that most of us will not be
induced to embrace virtue either by the fear of punishment or the hope of
promised reward”.
Charles.—“I see it, and must, alas I acknowledge, that there are many
such. I beg you, however, to inform me as briefly as possible, how we, as
Christians, are to understand and regard these chief virtues”.
Alcuin.—“Does not that appear to you to be wisdom, whereby God, after
the manner of human understanding, is known and feared, and his future judgment
believed?”
Charles.—“I understand you; and grant that nothing is more excellent
than this wisdom. I also remember that it is written in Job, Behold, the wisdom
of man is the fear of God. And what is the fear of God, but the worship of God,
which in the Greek is called Theosophy”.
Alcuin.—“It is so : and farther, what is righteousness but the love of
God, and the observance of his commandments?”
Charles.—“I perceive this also, that nothing is more perfect than this
righteousness, or rather that there is no other than this”.
Alcuin.—“Do you not consider that to be valour whereby a man overcomes
the Evil One, and is enabled to bear with firmness the trials of the world?”
Charles.—“Nothing appears to me more glorious than such a victory”.
Alcuin: —“Is not that temperance which checks desire, restrains avarice,
and tranquillizes and governs all the passions of the soul?”
The king agrees to this also, and thus the whole dialogue concludes.
The treatise on the second part of Logic, or the third part of Ethics,
is a continuation of the former; and therefore, also, in the form of a dialogue
betwixt Alcuin and his royal pupil. The rules and examples given for the
formation of syllogisms are quite in the style of Aristotle’s category, on
which indeed the work is founded, without any of the subtleties and absurd
sophistry of the later schoolmen, who were disputants by profession, and could
not calculate upon a victory on which depended their reputation and their very
existence, unless they possessed sharper weapons of attack, and higher
entrenchments of dialectic forms for their defence than their adversaries. The
examples are taken in part from the Latin authors, particularly from the works
of Virgil and Cicero.
The three subjects of the Trivium had no particular reference to the
daily interests of life, affecting them only in so far as they tended to the
general improvement of the mind. They were useful as the handmaidens of
theology, and intended for the support of the true faith; but when an impetus
has once been given to thought, it is impossible to prescribe its course. The
mind now aroused to philosophical research, boldly instituted an enquiry into
the dogmas of the church, testing them, not by their external authority but by
their internal worth. It will be seen that during the reign of Charlemagne, the
pretensions of the Church, and during that of his son and successor, the
administration of public affairs, underwent a rigorous investigation. It was
neither the superior justice of their cause, nor the weight of their influence,
that procured for the sons of Louis the Pious the victory over their father;
but the talents of men like Agobard, who considered a
reform in the state necessary, and who hoped to see accomplished in their own
way, by the sons who were dependent on them, those schemes which the father had
neither sufficient independence of mind, nor reckless firmness of character to
execute. The science of Ethics, therefore, as it was then taught, was important
as a means of liberating the mind from the shackles of superstition and
despotism. Had it extended throughout all classes, as Charlemagne intended, it
would have given a very different aspect to the character of the middle ages;
but the laity being opposed to the clergy merely as a physical force, the
latter had all the advantage of education on their side, and of course obtained
the victory in every intellectual contest.
The four component parts of Physics were of a more practical kind, and
applicable to the objects of ordinary life. Although Alcuin has not
systematically developed his views in any work on the subject, still there
exists a sufficient number of passages in his letters to Charles, to indicate
his method, and the share which the king took in those scientific pursuits.
Astronomy was the study that chiefly interested him. This science affords to
the mind which has not yet arrived at a perfect consciousness of its own capabilities,
an external object to which it may elevate itself, and from which it may obtain
a standard whereby to pleasure its own power; for there is something sublime in
the thought that the laws of nature, to which our material being must do
homage, are subordinate to our intellectual faculties. The king studied it,
also, with a view to the accurate admeasurement of time, and the formation of a
fixed calendar so important for the .regulation of life both in church and
state. He required Alcuin to calculate the lunar and solar year, and to
explain, from astronomical observations, the cause of the over plus of ten
hours and a half in each month, in consequence of which the year gained five
days, six hours, and every fourth year an intercalary day. The completion of
the nineteen years’ cycle in the year 797, having rendered the intercalation of
a day necessary, in order to avoid confusion in the calendar, Alcuin proposed
counting thirty-one days in the month of November. At that time, but contrary
to his will, a new method of calculation, the Alexandrian reckoning, had
insinuated itself into the court school; and a dispute arose as to the period
when the year should commence. Those who adopted the new method insisted that
the year ought to begin at the autumnal equinox, when the light of day is
becoming shorter, and the darkness of night longer; whilst Alcuin maintained
that the commencement of increasing light, the winter solstice, a time which
also coincided with the festival of Christmas, was a more convenient period. He
ridicules his opponents with much ingenuity and bitterness. “Darkness”, he
says, “might be very suitable to Egyptians; but he rejoiced that he had escaped
from it, with Moses, to live and to abide in the precious land of light; and
that on no account would he, nor should the king either, return to Egyptian
darkness”.
Charles was such an attentive observer of the heavens that nothing
remarkable occurred without attracting his notice, and awakening his
reflection. From the month of July, 798, till the same month in the following
year, the planet Mars was nowhere visible in the heavens; wherefore, the king,
who had in vain sought for it in the constellation Cancer, asked Alcuin whether
its disappearance was to be attributed to its own natural course, or to the
power of the sun, or to a miracle. These facts sufficiently attest the interest
which Charles took in astronomy, and confirm the passing remark of Einhard,
that the king devoted more time and pains to astronomy than to any other
science. It seems he was desirous of constructing a German almanac; at all
events, the introduction of German names of the months originated with him;
some he borrowed from the Anglo-Saxon, and some he invented. He called January
Winter-month; February, Horning-month; March, Spring-month; April,
Easter-month; May, Pleasure-month; June, Fallow-month; July, Hay-month; August,
Harvest-month; September, Meadow-month; October, Wind-month; November,
Autumn-month; December, Holy-month.
Astronomy, like the other branches of physics, was, in Alcuin’s opinion,
to be regarded as a science principally in its reference to theology. Its
object was to afford to the doubting mind the most convincing evidence of the
existence of a Creator, to awaken in the believer the highest veneration of the
wisdom of the Almighty, and to strengthen his faith. Even arithmetic first
derived its title to be considered a science from its adaptation to Theology.
The numbers in the Holy Scriptures, for instance, could not escape the mystical
interpretation which it was the fashion of those times to give, and which was
held to be essential to the right faith; they were supposed to contain a hidden
meaning, which Arithmetic would help to disclose. Alcuin’s method, and the
acuteness with which he traces through all its windings a theory, which,
however perverted it may seem, was by no means destitute of ingenuity, will be
best seen in a letter of which the following is a literal translation. It is
addressed to one of his pupils named Onias or
Daphnis; and explains the passage in the Song of Solomon, wherein it is said,
vi. 8. “There are threescore queens, and fourscore concubines and virgins
without number”. He writes thus :—“An accurate acquaintance with numbers,
teaches us that some are even, others uneven; that of the even numbers, some
are perfect, others imperfect; and further, that of the imperfect numbers, some
are greater, others less. All numbers are unequal that cannot be divided into
two equal parts, such as 7 or 9, which, if divided, will be found to contain
unequal parts. Of the equal numbers, some are perfect, others imperfect. A
perfect number is one which is formed entirely of its aliquot parts, which will
divide without leaving a fractional remainder, and the sum of whose parts is
neither greater nor less than the whole. Take, for example, the number 6; the
half of 6 is 3, the third is 2, and the sixth 1, which parts added together
make 6; thus producing no fractions by division, nor over plus by the addition
of the aliquot parts. The perfect Creator, therefore, who made all things very
good, created the world in six days, in order to show that everything that he
had formed, was perfect in its kind. On the other hand, if we divide the number
8, we shall find that the sum of its parts is less than the whole. The half of
8 is 4, the fourth is 2, the eighth 1, which parts, when added together,
produce not 8 but 7; 1 + 2 + 4 = 7 not 8. On this account, when the human race
after the flood replenished the earth, they originated from the number 8; for
we read that 8 persons were in Noah’s ark, from whom all mankind is descended;
thus indicating that the second race is less perfect than the first, which had
been created in the number 6. As Adam was formed on the sixth day out of the
virgin earth, so also our Redeemer, the restorer of the primitive perfection
was born of the Virgin Mary in the sixth age of the world, in order to proclaim
by his coming the perfection of the number 6, which had been intimated at the
creation of the first man. We see, moreover, the progression of numbers in
certain regular series until they become infinite. The first progression of
numbers is from 1 to 10, the second from 10 to 100, the third from 100 to 1000.
The same rule of perfection or imperfection that applies to the first series
from 1 to 10, applies also to the second from 10 to 100. For as the number 6
when divided by units is found to be perfect, so also will the number 60, when
divided by tens, the 10 in this case taking the place of the unit. The division
of 60 into its aliquot parts is as follows; the half of 60 is 30, like as 3 is
the half of 6; the third is 20, as 2 is of 6; and 10 stands in the place of the
unit; these parts, when added together, make 60 : — thus --- 10 + 20 + 30 = 60;
as 1 + 2 + 3 = 6. The same rule cannot be applied to the division of 80; for of
80, the half is 40, the fourth 20; the eighth 10; the sum of which is not 80
but 70; for 10 -- 20 + 40 = 70.
“The sixty queens and eighty concubines are the members of the holy
church. Of these, some devote themselves to teaching purely from love to
Christ; others who seek worldly advantage, labour, indeed, in the church, but
it is for the sake of temporal gain, not from a longing after the heavenly
country, that they are willing thus to toil. The latter are compared in their
imperfection to the number 80; but the former in their perfect holiness are
denoted by the number 60. They are worthy the name of queens, because they,
simply from love to the bridegroom and a desire to multiply the heirs of
heaven, seek to perpetuate a blessed succession by means of baptism and
instruction. The others, on the contrary, are designated by the name of
concubines, because, although they also, through baptism and instruction, often
produce worthy sons, yet, being actuated by the love of this world and the
ambition of acquiring earthly honour, they themselves remain unhonored. With
such, I beseech thee, my dearest son, avoid all fellowship; and if through the
mercy of God thou should hereafter become worthy to be an instructor, labour
unceasingly from love to him who shed his blood for thy salvation, in order
that thou may obtain in recompense, not perishable riches, but everlasting
glory round the throne of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be praise and glory
for ever and ever. Amen”.
All the numbers that occur in the Holy Scriptures were at that time
interpreted in a similar manner; and it was only in this point of view that
Alcuin would allow arithmetic to possess any scientific utility or any power to
afford intellectual enjoyment. Consequently, geometry, which would admit of no
such application, held a subordinate rank, so long as the value of science was
calculated solely with reference to theology; while, on the other hand, music
was held in high estimation. The importance of music in divine service was too
great, not to secure for it a prominent place amongst the subjects of
instruction in the schools at that period. To the service of God, solemnities
are essential which are able to set the spirit free from the common cares and
interests of life, and to attune it to the sublimest sentiments of devotion. Nothing short of a revolution, which, in the violence
with which it overturns all existing institutions, brings about the opposite
extreme, could have induced men to sever the connection between the arts and
religion, to banish all ceremonies and to substitute a cold morality for the
heart-stirring doctrines of religion. The churches robbed of their decorations
became mere lecture-rooms, the pulpit was degraded into the professor’s chair,
whence the teacher delivered to his audience a discourse on morals. But as soon
as the excitement produced by such contests has subsided, a mere address to the
understanding will be found incompetent to rouse men from apathy, and the
necessity of adopting some mode of external worship that shall appeal directly
to the feelings will become apparent. In the absence of other means,
appropriate music and singing are and ever will be the simplest, and at the
same time the most effectual. What at that time was called music, was nothing
more than chanting; but this defect Charlemagne endeavored to remedy to the
best of his ability; for he himself had a taste for music, which he cultivated
under Alcuin’s instruction. The choir of his cathedral was the most celebrated
in France, and was considered a model for that of all the other churches.
The system of Theology, and the interest taken by Charles and his
friends in the studies appertaining to it, will find a more appropriate place
for discussion, when the controversy betwixt the orthodox church and the new
sect of Adoptionists passes under review. It is
probable that during his first residence at court, Alcuin communicated to the
king his views on many subjects of importance both to the church and state;
especially his sentiments with regard to the position of the Pope. As an
Anglo-Saxon, he was imbued with the most humble and profound reverence for the
holy see. In a letter to Hadrian the first, he acknowledges the Pope as the
worthy successor of St. Peter, and styles him the heir of the power granted by
Christ to the apostles, of binding and losing in heaven and on earth. He found
the papal authority already firmly established in the French kingdom,
particularly in that portion of it which was purely German; for the restoration
of Christianity in those parts, where it had been formerly professed, and the
introduction of it where it was utterly unknown, had been principally effected
by the Anglo-Saxons.
The veneration felt by the Germans for their heathen priests was
adroitly transferred by these Missionaries to the ministers of Christianity,
and particularly to the sovereign pontiff, the Pope, of whom men conceived
ideas magnified in proportion to the distance at which he governed. A model for
the establishment of a hierarchy had been already furnished in the history of
the Jewish nation, with which, through the medium of the Old Testament, the
people were more conversant than with that of their own country, and which
could not fail to have a considerable influence upon their political opinions.
The Jewish polity afforded not merely the only rule that could be applied to
public measures, and the only source from which the principles of
administration could be derived; but it was a pattern which seemed so much the
more worthy of imitation, as it had originated in God himself. The Carolingian
family availed themselves of these opinions to promote their own advancement,
and gave the theory a practical adaptation. Pepin concealed his usurpation
under the authority of the Pope, and sanctified his person and the crown which
he had so unjustly acquired, by causing himself and his family to be solemnly
anointed first by St. Boniface, and afterwards by the Pope himself. It is
recorded in the Old Testament, that the high priest Samuel nominated and
anointed a king at the command of God, and that at the bidding of the same God,
he deposed him in order to place another on his throne. The idea that the Pope
was to be regarded as a second Samuel, who, like the former, was authorized to
depose one king and consecrate another, was too convenient, not to become
henceforth an important principle in all the political movements of the middle
ages. Alcuin, therefore, naturally regarded the authority of the Pope as the
highest upon earth, and ventured to avow his sentiments to Charlemagne himself.
In the same degree as the see of St. Peter, the prince of the apostles, was
superior to every earthly throne, the Pope who occupied his see could not but
be considered superior to every earthly power. Next in rank to the papal came
the imperial dignity of the Byzantian emperors who governed the second Rome;
and then followed that of royalty. Alcuin adds, however, by way of sweetening
the bitter pill with a little flattery, that if King Charles theoretically held
the third rank amongst the rulers of the earth, he practically by his power,
his wisdom, and the splendor of his kingdom held the
first. It is by no means surprising, that while opinions such as these were
current in the world, the decretals of the false Isidorus should have been forged, and obtained credit. Though the grossness of the
forgery is apparent on the very face of the work, the sentiments which it
contained were neither new nor unheard of, but were compounded of principles already
universally acknowledged, and of inferences deduced from those principles. The
whole scheme of the Roman hierarchy, as it afterwards displayed itself, was
devised at this period, and although retarded by subsequent unfavourable
circumstances, it was sufficiently matured to burst forth at the first call of
a bold and intrepid spirit in all its imposing grandeur.
ALCUIN'S OPINIONS CONCERNING TITHES.
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