CRISTO RAUL.ORG 'READING HALL: THE DOORS OF WISDOM 2022 |
BIBLIOMANIA IN THE MIDDLE AGES
CHAPTER I
Duties of the monkish librarian
In this chapter I shall proceed to inquire into the duties of the monkish
amanuensis, and show by what laws and regulations the monastic libraries were
governed. The monotonous habits of a cloistered bibliophile will, perhaps,
appear dry and fastidious, but still it is curious and interesting to observe
how carefully the monks regarded their vellum tomes, how indefatigably they
worked to increase their stores, and how eagerly they sought for books. But
besides being regarded as a literary curiosity, the subject derives importance
by the light it throws on the state of learning in those dark and
"bookless" days, and the illustrations gleaned in this way fully
compensate for the tediousness of the research.
As a bibliophile it is somewhat pleasing to trace a deep book passion
growing up in the barrenness of the cloister, and to find in some cowled monk
a bibliomaniac as warm and enthusiastic in his way as the renowned
"Atticus", or the noble Roxburghe, of more recent times. It is
true we can draw no comparison between the result of their respective labors.
The hundreds, which in the old time were deemed a respectable if not an
extensive collection, would look insignificant beside the ostentatious array of
modern libraries.
But the very tenor of a monastic life compelled the monk to seek the sweet
yet silent companionship of books; the rules of his order and the regulations
of his fraternity enforced the strictest silence in the execution of his daily
and never-ceasing duties. Attending mass, singing psalms, and midnight prayers,
were succeeded by mass, psalms and prayers in one long undeviating round of
yearly obligations; the hours intervening between these holy exercises were
dull and tediously insupportable if unoccupied. Conversation forbidden, secular
amusements denounced, yet idleness reproached, what could the poor monk seek as
a relief in this distress but the friendly book; the willing and obedient
companion of every one doomed to lonely hours and dismal solitude?
Rules of the library.
The pride and glory of a monastery was a well stored library, which was
committed to the care of the armarian, and with
him rested all the responsibility of its preservation. According to the Consuetudines Canonicorum Regularium, it was his duty to have all the books
of the monastery in his keeping catalogued and separately marked with their
proper names. Some of these old catalogues have been preserved, and, viewed as
bibliographical remains of the middle ages, are of considerable importance;
indeed, we cannot form a correct idea of the literature of those remote times
without them. Many productions of authors are recorded in these brief
catalogues whose former existence is only known to us by these means.
There is one circumstance in connection with them that must not be
forgotten: instead of enumerating all the works which each volume contained,
they merely specified the first, so that a catalogue of fifty or a hundred
volumes might probably have contained nearly double that number of distinct
works. I have seen MSS. formerly belonging to monasteries, which have been
catalogued in this way, containing four or five others, besides the one
mentioned. Designed rather to identify the book than to describe the contents
of each volume, they wrote down the first word or two of the second leaf—this
was the most prevalent usage; but they often adopted other means, sometimes
giving a slight notice of the works which a volume contained; others took the
precaution of noting down the last word of the last leaf but one, a great
advantage, as the monkish student could more easily detect at a glance whether
the volume was perfect.
The armarian was, moreover,
particularly enjoined to inspect with scrupulous care the more ancient volumes,
lest the moth-worms should have got at them, or they had become corrupt or
mutilated, and, if such were the case, he was with great care to restore them.
Probably the armarian was also the
bookbinder to the monastery in ordinary cases, for he is here directed to cover
the volumes with tablets of wood, that the inside may be preserved from
moisture, and the parchment from the injurious effects of dampness. The
different orders of books were to be kept separate from one another, and conveniently
arranged; not squeezed too tight, lest it should injure or confuse them, but so
placed that they might be easily distinguished, and those who sought them might
find them without delay or impediment.
Bibliomaniacs have not been remarkable for their memory or punctuality, and
in the early times the borrower was often forgetful to return the volume within
the specified time. To guard against this, many rules were framed, nor was
the armarian allowed to lend the books,
even to neighboring monasteries, unless he received a bond or promise to
restore them within a certain time, and if the person was entirely unknown, a
book of equal value was required as a security for its safe return. In all
cases the armarian was instructed to make a
short memorandum of the name of the book which he had lent or received. The
"great and precious books" were subject to still more stringent
rules, and although under the conservation of the librarian, he had not the
privilege of lending them to any one without the
distinct permission of the abbot. This was, doubtless, practiced by all the
monastic libraries, for all generously lent one another their books.
Lending books
In a collection of chapter orders of the prior and convent of Durham,
bearing date 1235, it is evident that a similar rule was observed there, which
they were not to depart from except at the desire of the bishop. According to
the constitutions for the government of the Abingdon monastery, the library was
under the care of the Cantor, and all the writings of the church were consigned
to his keeping.
He was not allowed to part with the books or lend them without a sufficient
deposit as a pledge for their safe return, except to persons of consequence and
repute. This was the practice at a much later period. When that renowned
bibliomaniac, Richard de Bury, wrote his delightful little book
called Philobiblon, the same rules were
strictly in force. With respect to the lending of books, his own directions are
that, if any one apply for a particular volume, the librarian was to carefully
consider whether the library contained another copy of it; if so, he was at
liberty to lend the book, taking care, however, that he obtained a security
which was to exceed the value of the loan; they were at the same time to make a
memorandum in writing of the name of the book, and the nature of the security
deposited for it, with the name of the party to whom it was lent, with that of
the officer or librarian who delivered it.
We learn by the canons before referred to, that the superintendence of all
the writing and transcribing, whether in or out of the monastery, belonged to
the office of the armarian, and that it was his
duty to provide the scribes with parchment and all things necessary for their
work, and to agree upon the price with those whom he employed. The monks who were
appointed to write in the cloisters he supplied with copies for transcription;
and that no time might be wasted, he was to see that a good supply was kept up.
No one was to give to another what he himself had been ordered to write, or
presume to do anything by his own will or inclination. Nor was it seemly that
the armarian even should give any orders
for transcripts to be made without first receiving the permission of his
superior.
We here catch a glimpse of the quiet life of a monkish student, who labored
with this monotonous regularity to amass his little library. If we dwell on
these scraps of information, we shall discover some marks of a love of learning
among them, and the liberality they displayed in lending their books to each
other is a pleasing trait to dwell upon.
They unhesitatingly imparted to others the knowledge they acquired by their
own study with a brotherly frankness and generosity well becoming the spirit of
a student. This they did by extensive correspondence and the temporary exchange
of their books. The system of loan, which they in this manner carried on to a
considerable extent, is an important feature in connection with our subject;
innumerable and interesting instances of this may be found in the monastic
registers, and the private letters of the times.
The cheapness of literary productions of the present age render it an
absolute waste of time to transcribe a whole volume, and except with books of
great scarcity we seldom think of borrowing or lending one; having finished its
perusal we place it on the shelf and in future regard it as a book of
reference; but in those days one volume did the work of twenty. It was lent to
a neighboring monastery, and this constituted its publication; for each
monastery thus favored, by the aid perhaps of some half dozen scribes, added a
copy to their own library, and it was often stipulated that on the return of
the original a correct duplicate should accompany it, as a remuneration to its
author. Nor was the volume allowed to remain unread; it was recited aloud at
meals, or when otherwise met together, to the whole community. We shall do well
to bear this in mind, and not hastily judge of the number of students by a
comparison with the number of their books. But it was not always a mere single
volume that the monks lent from their library. Hunter has printed a list of
books lent by the Convent of Henton, a. d. 1343,
to a neighboring monastery, containing twenty volumes. The engagement to
restore these books was formally drawn up and sealed.
Books allowed the monks for private reading
In the monasteries the first consideration was to see that the library was
well stored with those books necessary for the performance of the various
offices of the church, but besides these the library ought, according to
established rules, to contain for the "edification of the brothers"
such as were fit and needful to be consulted in common study. The Bible and
great expositors; Bibliothecæ et majores expositores, books of martyrs, lives of saints,
homilies, etc.; these and other large books the monks were allowed to take and
study in private, but the smaller ones they could only study in the library,
lest they should be lost or mislaid. This was also the case with respect to the
rare and choice volumes. When the armarian gave
out books to the monks he made a note of their nature, and took an exact
account of their number, so that he might know in a moment which of the
brothers had it for perusal.
Those who studied together were to receive what books they choose; but when
they had satisfied themselves, they were particularly directed to restore them
to their assigned places; and when they at any time received from the armarian a book for their private reading, they were
not allowed to lend it to anyone else, or to use it in common, but to reserve
it especially for his own private reading. The same rule extended to the
singers, who if they required books for their studies, were to apply to the
abbot. The sick brothers were also entitled to the privilege of receiving from
the armarian books for their solace and
comfort; but as soon as the lamps were lighted in the infirmary the books were
put away till the morning, and if not finished, were again given out from the
library. In the more ancient monasteries a similar case was observed with
respect to their books. The rule of St. Pacome directed
that the utmost attention should be paid to their preservation, and that when
the monks went to the refectory they were not to leave their books open, but to
carefully close and put them in their assigned places.
The monastery of St. Pacome contained a
vast number of monks; every house, says Mabillon,
was composed of not less than forty monks, and the monastery embraced thirty or
forty houses. Each monk, he adds, possessed his book, and few rested without
forming a library; by which we may infer that the number of books was
considerable. Indeed, it was quite a common practice in those days, scarce as
books were, to allow each of the monks one or more for his private study,
besides granting them access to the library. The constitutions of Lanfranc, in
the year 1072, directed the librarian, at the commencement of Lent, to deliver
a book to each of the monks for their private reading, allowing them a whole
year for its perusal. There is one circumstance connected with the affairs of
the library quite characteristic of monkish superstition, and bearing painful
testimony to their mistaken ideas of what constituted "good works."
In Martene's book there is a chapter, De Scientia et Signis—degrading and sad; there is something withal
curious to be found in it. After enjoining the most scrupulous silence in the
church, in the refectory, in the cloister, and in the dormitory, at all times,
and in all seasons; transforming those men into perpetual mutes, and even when
"actually necessary," permitting only a whisper to be articulated
"in a low voice in the ear", submissa voce
in aure, it then proceeds to describe a
series of fantastic grimaces which the monks were to perform on applying to
the armarian for books.
The general sign for a book, generali signi libri, was to "extend the hand and make
a movement as if turning over the leaves of a book." For a missal the monk
was to make a similar movement with a sign of the cross; for the gospels the
sign of the cross on the forehead; for an antiphon or book of responses he was
to strike the thumb and little finger of the other hand together; for a book of
offices or gradale to make the sign
of a cross and kiss the fingers; for a tract lay the hand on the abdomen and
apply the other hand to the mouth; for a capitulary make the general sign and
extend the clasped hands to heaven; for a psalter place the hands
upon the head in the form of a crown, such as the king is wont to wear.
Religious intolerance was rampant when this rule was framed; hot and rancorous
denunciation was lavished with amazing prodigality against works of loose
morality or heathen origin; nor did the monks feel much compassion—although
they loved to read them—for the old authors of antiquity. Pagans they were, and
therefore fit only to be named as infidels and dogs, so the monk was directed
for a secular book, "which some pagan wrote after making the general sign
to scratch his ear with his hand, just as a dog itching would do with his feet,
because infidels are not unjustly compared to such creatures. Wretched bigotry
and puny malice! Yet what a sad reflection it is, that with all the foul and
heartburning examples which those dark ages of the monks afford, posterity have
failed to profit by them—religious intolerance, with all its vain-glory and
malice, flourishes still, the cankering worm of many a Christian blossom!
Besides the duties which we have enumerated, there were others which it was
the province of the armarian to fulfill. He
was particularly to inspect and collate those books which, according to the
decrees of the church, it was unlawful to possess different from the authorized
copies; these were the bible, the gospels, missals, epistles, collects graduales, antiphons, hymns, psalters, lessions, and the monastic rules; these were always to be
alike even in the most minute point. He was moreover directed to prepare for
the use of the brothers short tables respecting the times mentioned in the
capitulary for the various offices of the church, to make notes upon the
matins, the mass, and upon the different orders. In fact, the monkish
amanuensis was expected to undertake all those matters which required care and
learning combined. He wrote the letters of the monastery, and often filled the
office of secretary to my Lord Abbot. In the monasteries of course the services
of the librarian were unrequited by any pecuniary remuneration, but in the
cathedral libraries a certain salary was sometimes allowed them.
How the libraries were supported
Thus we learn that the amanuensis of the conventual church of Ely
received in the year 1372 forty-three shillings and four pence for his annual
duties; and Oswald, Bishop of Worcester, in the tenth century, gave
considerable landed possessions to a monk of that church as a recompense for
his services as librarian. In some monasteries, in the twelfth century, if not
earlier, they levied a tax on all the members of the community, who paid a
yearly sum to the librarian for binding, preserving, and purchasing copies for
the library. One of these rules, bearing date 1145, was made by Udon, Abbot of St. Père en Vallée à Chantres, and
that it might be more plausibly received, he taxed himself as well as all the
members of his own house. The librarian sometimes, in addition to his regular
duties, combined the office of precentor to the monastery.
Some of their account-books have been preserved, and by an inspection of them,
we may occasionally gather some interesting and curious hints, as to the cost
of books and writing materials in those times. As may be supposed, the monkish
librarians often became great bibliophiles, for being in constant communication
with choice manuscripts, they soon acquired a great mania for them. Posterity
are also particularly indebted to the pens of these book conservators of the
middle ages; for some of the best chroniclers and writers of those times were
humble librarians to some religious house.
Not only did the bibliophiles of old exercise the utmost care in the
preservation of their darling books, but the religious basis of their education
and learning prompted them to supplicate the blessing of God upon their goodly
tomes. Although I might easily produce other instances, one will suffice to
give an idea of their nature: "O Lord, send the virtue of thy Holy Spirit
upon these our books; that cleansing them from all earthly things, by thy holy
blessing, they may mercifully enlighten our hearts and give us true
understanding; and grant that by thy teaching, they may brightly preserve and
make full an abundance of good works according to thy will."
Ely
Cathedral.-The first Christian building on the site was founded by St. Æthelthryth (romanised as "Etheldreda"), daughter of the Anglo-Saxon King Anna of
East Anglia, who was born in 630 at Exning near Newmarket. She may have
acquired land at Ely from her first husband Tondberht,
described by Bede as a "prince" of the South Gyrwas.After the end of her second marriage to Ecgfrith, a prince of Northumbria, she set up
and ruled a monastery at Ely in 673, and, when she died, a shrine was built
there to her memory. The monastery is traditionally believed to have been
destroyed in the Danish invasions of the late 9th century, together with what
is now the city. However, while the lay settlement of the time would have been
a minor one, it is likely that a church survived there until its refoundation
in the 10th century.A new Benedictine monastery was
built and endowed on the site by Athelwold, Bishop of
Winchester, in 970, in a wave of monastic refoundations which locally included Peterborough and Ramsey.This became a cathedral in 1109, after a new Diocese of Ely was created out of land
taken from the Diocese of Lincoln.
Scriptoria and the Scribes
As the monasteries were the schools of learning, so their occupants were
the preservers of literature, and, as Herault observes,
had they not taken the trouble to transcribe books, the ancients had been lost
to us for ever; to them, therefore, we owe much.
But there are many, however, who suppose that the monastic establishments were
hotbeds of superstition and fanaticism, from whence nothing of a useful or
elevated nature could possibly emanate. They are too apt to suppose that the
human intellect must be altogether weak and impotent when confined within such
narrow limits; but truth and knowledge can exist even in the dark cells of a
gloomy cloister, and inspire the soul with a fire that can shed a light far
beyond its narrow precincts. Indeed, I scarce know whether to regret, as some
appear to do, that the literature and learning of those rude times was
preserved and fostered by the Christian church; it is said, that their strict
devotion and religious zeal prompted them to disregard all things but a knowledge
of those divine, but such is not the case; at least, I have not found it so; it
is true, as churchmen, they were principally devoted to the study of divine and
ecclesiastical lore; but it is also certain that in that capacity they
gradually infused the mild spirit of their Master among the darkened society
over which they presided, and among whom they shone as beacons of light in a
dreary desert. But the church did more than this.
She preserved to posterity the profane learnings of Old Greece
and Rome; copied it, multiplied it, and spread it. She recorded to after
generations in plain, simple language, the ecclesiastical and civil events of
the past, for it is from the terse chronicles of the monkish churchmen that we
learn now the history of what happened then. Much as we may dislike the
monastic system, the cold, heartless, gloomy ascetic atmosphere of the
cloister, and much as we may deplore the mental dissipation of man's best
attributes, which the system of those old monks engendered, we must exercise a
cool and impartial judgment, and remember that what now would be intolerable
and monstrously inconsistent with our present state of intellectuality, might
at some remote period, in the ages of darkness and comparative barbarism, have
had its virtues and beneficial influences.
As for myself, it would be difficult to convince me, with all those fine
relics of their deeds before me, those beauteous fanes dedicated to piety and
God, those libraries so crowded with their vellum tomes, so gorgeously adorned,
and the abundant evidence which history bears to their known charity and
hospitable love, that these monks and their system was a scheme of dismal
barbarism; it may be so, but my reading has taught me different; but, on the
other hand, although the monks possessed many excellent qualities, being the
encouragers of literature, the preservers of books, and promulgators of
civilization, we must not hide their numerous and palpable faults, or overlook
the poison which their system of monachism ultimately infused into
the very vitals of society.
In the early centuries, before the absurdities of Romanism were introduced,
the influence of the monastic orders was highly beneficial to our Saxon
ancestors, but in after ages the Church of England was degraded by the
influence of the fast growing abominations of Popedom. She drank copiously of
the deadly potion, and became the blighted and ghostly shadow of her former
self. Forgetting the humility of her divine Lord, she sought rather to imitate
the worldly splendor and arrogance of her Sovereign Pontiff. The evils too
obviously existed to be overlooked; but it is not my place to further expose
them; a more pleasing duty guides my pen; others have done all this, lashing
them painfully for their oft-told sins. Frail humanity glories in chastising the
frailty of brother man. But we will not denounce them here, for did not the day
of retribution come? And was not justice satisfied? Having made these few
preliminary remarks, let us, in a brief manner, inquire into the system
observed in the cloisters by the monks for the preservation and transcription
of manuscripts. Let us peep into the quiet cells of those old monks, and see
whether history warrants the unqualified contempt which their efforts in this
department have met with.
In most monasteries there were two kinds of Scriptoria, or writing offices;
for in addition to the large and general apartment used for the transcription
of church books and manuscripts for the library, there were also several
smaller ones occupied by the superiors and the more learned members of the
community, as closets for private devotion and study. Thus we read, that in the
Cistercian orders there were places set apart for the transcription of books
called Scriptoria, or cells assigned to the scribes, "separate from each
other," where the books might be transcribed in the strictest silence,
according to the holy rules of their founders. These little cells were usually
situated in the most retired part of the monastery, and were probably incapable
of accommodating more than one or two persons; dull and comfortless places, no
doubt, yet they were deemed great luxuries, and the use of them only granted to
such as became distinguished for their piety, or erudition.
We read that when David went to the Isle of Wight, to Paulinus, to
receive his education, he used to sup in the Refectory, but had a Scriptorium,
or study, in his cell, being a famous scribe. The aged monks, who often lived
in these little offices, separate from the rest of the scribes, were not
expected to work so arduously as the rest. Their employment was comparatively
easy; nor were they compelled to work so long as those in the cloister. There
is a curious passage in Tangmar's Life
of St. Bernward, which would lead us to
suspect that private individuals possessed Scriptoria; for, says he, there are
Scriptoria, not only in the monasteries, but in other places, in which are
conceived books equal to the divine works of the philosophers.
Care in copying
The Scriptorium of the monastery in which the general business of a
literary nature was transacted, was an apartment far more extensive and
commodious, fitted up with forms and desks methodically arranged, so as to
contain conveniently a great number of copyists. In some of the monasteries and
cathedrals, they had long ranges of seats one after another, at which were
seated the scribes, one well versed in the subject on which the book treated,
recited from the copy whilst they wrote; so that, on a word being given out by
him, it was copied by all. The multiplication of manuscripts, under such a
system as this, must have been immense; but they did not always make
books, fecit libros,
as they called it, in this wholesale manner, but each monk diligently labored
at the transcription of a separate work.
The amount of labor carried on in the Scriptorium, of course, in many cases
depended upon the revenues of the abbey, and the disposition of the abbot; but
this was not always the case, as in some monasteries they undertook the
transcription of books as a matter of commerce, and added broad lands to their
house by the industry of their pens. But the Scriptorium was frequently
supported by resources solely applicable to its use. Laymen, who had a taste
for literature, or who entertained an esteem for it in others, often at their
death bequeathed estates for the support of the monastic Scriptoria. Robert,
one of the Norman leaders, gave two parts of the tythes of
Hatfield, and the tythes of Redburn,
for the support of the Scriptorium of St. Alban's. The one belonging to the
monastery of St. Edmundsbury was endowed with two mills, and in the
church of Ely there is a charter of Bishof Nigellus, granting to the Scriptorium of the monastery
the tythes of Wythessey and Impitor, two parts of the tythes of
the Lordship of Pampesward, with 2s. 2d., and
a messuage in Ely ad faciendos et emandandos libros.
The abbot superintended the management of the Scriptorium, and decided upon
the hours for their labor, during which time they were ordered to work with
unremitting diligence, "not leaving to go and wander in idleness",
but to attend solely to the business of transcribing. To prevent detraction or
interruption, no one was allowed to enter except the abbot, the prior, the
sub-prior, and the armarian, as the latter took
charge of all the materials and implements used by the transcribers, it was his
duty to prepare and give them out when required; he made the ink and cut the
parchment ready for use. He was strictly enjoined, however, to exercise the
greatest economy in supplying these precious materials, and not to give more
copies "nec artavos, nec cultellos, nec scarpellæ, nec membranes," than was actually necessary, or
than he had computed as sufficient for the work; and what the armarian gave them the monks were to receive without
contradiction or contention.
The utmost silence prevailed in the Scriptorium; rules were framed, and
written admonitions hung on the walls, to enforce the greatest care and
diligence in copying exactly from the originals.
Other means were resorted to besides these to preserve the text of their
books immaculate, it was a common practice for the scribe at the end of his
copy, to adjure all who transcribed from it to use the greatest care, and to
refrain from the least alteration of word or sense. Authors more especially
followed this course, thus at the end of some we find such injunctions as this.
"I adjure you who shall transcribe this book, by our Lord Jesus Christ
and by his glorious coming, who will come to judge the quick and the dead, that
you compare what you transcribe and diligently correct it by the copy from
which you transcribe it—this adjuration also—and insert it in your copy."
The Consuetudines Canonicorum, before referred to, also particularly impressed this
upon the monks, and directed that all the brothers who were engaged as scribes,
were not to alter any writing, although in their own mind they might think it
proper, without first receiving the sanction of the abbot, "on no account
were they to commit so great a presumption." But notwithstanding that the
scribes were thus enjoined to use the utmost care in copying books, doubtless
an occasional error crept in, which many causes might have produced, such as
bad light, haste, a little drowsiness, imperfect sight, or even a flickering
lamp was sufficient to produce some trivial error; but in works of importance
the smallest error is of consequence, as some future scribe puzzled by the
blunder, might, in an attempt to correct, still more augment the imperfection;
to guard against this, with respect to the Scriptures, the most critical care
was enforced. Monks advanced in age were alone allowed to transcribe them, and
after their completion they were read—revised—and reread again, and it is by
that means that so uniform a reading has been preserved, and although slight
differences may here and there occur, there are no books which have traversed
through the shadows of the dark ages, that preserve their original text so pure
and uncorrupt as the copies of the Scriptures, the fathers of the church, and
the ancient writings of the classic authors; sometimes, it is true, a
manuscript of the last order is discovered possessing a very different reading
in some particular passage; but these appear rather as futile emendations or
interpolations of the scribe than as the result of a downright blunder, and are
easily perceivable, for when the monkish churchmen tampered with ancient
copies, it generally originated in a desire to smooth over the indecencies of
the heathen authors, and so render them less liable to corrupt the holy contemplations
of the devotee; and while we blame the pious fraud, we cannot but respect the
motive that dictated it.
Bible reading among the monks
But as regards the Scriptures, we talk of the carelessness of the monks and
the interpolations of the scribes as if these were faults peculiar to the
monastic ages alone; alas! the history of Biblical transmission tells us
differently, the gross perversions, omissions, and errors wrought in the holy
text, proclaim how prevalent these same faults have been in the ages of printed
literature, and which appear more palpable by being produced amidst deep
scholars, and surrounded with all the critical acumen of a learned age. Five or
six thousand of these gross blunders, or these
willful mutilations, protest the unpleasant fact, and show how much of human
grossness it has acquired, and how besmeared with corruption those sacred pages
have become in passing through the hands of man, and the "revisings" of sectarian minds. I am tempted to
illustrate this by an anecdote related by Sir Nicholas L'Estrange of Hunstanton,
and preserved in a MS. in the Harlein collection.—"Dr.
Usher, Bish. of Armath,
being to preach at Paules Crosse and passing hastily by one of the
stationers, called for a Bible, and had a little one of the London edition
given him out, but when he came to looke for
his text, that very verse was omitted in the print: which gave the first
occasion of complaint to the king of the insufferable negligence, and insufficience of the London printers and presse, and bredde that
great contest that followed, betwixt the univers.
of Cambridge and London stationers, about printing of the Bibles."
Gross and numerous indeed were the errors of the corrupt bible text of that
age, and far exceeding even the blunders of monkish pens, and certainly much
less excusable, for in those times they seldom had a large collection of
codices to compare, so that by studying their various readings, they could
arrive at a more certain and authentic version. The paucity of the sacred
volume, if it rendered their pens more liable to err, served to enforce upon
them the necessity of still greater scrutiny. On looking over a monastic
catalogue, the first volume that I search for is the Bible; and, I feel far
more disappointment if I find it not there, than I do at the absence of Horace
or Ovid—there is something so desolate in the idea of a Christian priest
without the Book of Life—of a minister of God without the fountain of
truth—that however favorably we may be prone to regard them, a thought will
arise that the absence of this sacred book may perhaps be referred to the
indolence of the monkish pen, or to the laxity of priestly piety. But such I am
glad to say was not often the case; the Bible it is true was an expensive book,
but can scarcely be regarded as a rare one; the monastery was indeed poor that
had it not, and when once obtained the monks took care to speedily transcribe
it. Sometimes they only possessed detached portions, but when this was the case
they generally borrowed of some neighboring and more fortunate monastery, the
missing parts to transcribe, and so complete their own copies.
But all this did not make the Bible less loved among them, or less
anxiously and ardently studied, they devoted their days, and the long hours of
the night, to the perusal of those pages of inspired truth, and it is a calumny
without a shadow of foundation to declare that the monks were careless of
scripture reading (the monks were strictly enjoined by the monastic rules to
study the Bible unceasingly. The Statutes of the Dominican order are
particularly impressive on this point, and enforce a constant reading and
critical study of the sacred volume, so as to fortify themselves for
disputation; they were to peruse it continually, and apply to it before all
other reading); it is true they did not apply that vigor of thought, and
unrestrained reflection upon it which mark the labors of the more modern
student, nor did they often venture to interpret the hidden meaning of the holy
mysteries by the powers of their own mind, but were guided in this important
matter by the works of the fathers. But hence arose a circumstance which gave
full exercise to their mental powers and compelled the monk in spite of his
timidity to think a little for himself.
Unfortunately the fathers, venerable and venerated as they were, after all
were but men, with many of the frailties and all the fallibilities of poor
human nature; the pope might canonize them, and the priesthood bow submissively
to their spiritual guidance, still they remained for all that but mortals of
dust and clay, and their bulky tomes yet retain the swarthiness of the tomb
about them, the withering impress of humanity. Such being the case we, who do
not regard them quite so infallible, feel no surprise at a circumstance which
sorely perplexed the monks of old, they unchained and unclasped their cumbrous
"Works of the Fathers", and pored over those massy expositions with
increasing wonder; surrounded by these holy guides, these fathers of
infallibility, they were like strangers in a foreign land, did they follow this
holy saint they seemed about to forsake the spiritual direction of one having
equal claims to their obedience and respect; alas! for poor old weak tradition,
those fabrications of man's faulty reason were found, with all their orthodoxy,
to clash woefully in scriptural interpretation. Here was a dilemma for the
monkish student! whose vow of obedience to patristical guidance was
thus sorely perplexed; he read and re-read, analyzed passage after passage,
interpreted word after word; and yet, poor man, his laborious study was
fruitless and unprofitable!
What bible student can refrain from sympathizing with him amidst these
torturing doubts and this crowd of contradiction, but after all we cannot
regret this, for we owe to it more than my feeble pen can write, so
immeasurable have been the fruits of this little unheeded circumstance. It gave
birth to many a bright independent declaration, involving pure lines of
scripture interpretation, which appear in the darkness of those times like
fixed stars before us; to this, in Saxon days, we are indebted for the labors
of Ælfric and his anti-Roman doctrines,
whose soul also sympathized with a later age by translating portions of the
Bible into the vulgar tongue, thus making it accessible to all classes of the
people. To this we are indebted for all the good that resulted from those
various heterodoxies and heresies, which sometimes disturbed the church during
the dark ages; but which wrought much ultimate good by compelling the thoughts
of men to dwell on these important matters. Indeed, to the instability of the
fathers, as a sure guide, we may trace the origin of all those efforts of the
human mind, which cleared the way for the Reformation, and relieved man from
the shackles of these spiritual guides of the monks.
But there were many cloistered Christians who studied the bible undisturbed
by these shadows and doubts, and who, heedless of patristical lore
and saintly wisdom, devoured the spiritual food in its pure and uncontaminating simplicity—such students, humble,
patient, devoted, will be found crowding the monastic annals, and yielding good
evidence of the same by the holy tenor of their sinless lives, their Christian
charity and love.
But while so many obtained the good title of an "Amator Scripturarum," as the bible student was called in
those monkish days, I do not pretend to say that the Bible was a common book
among them, or that every monk possessed one—far different indeed was the
case—a copy of the Old and New Testament often supplied the wants of an entire
monastery, and in others, as I have said before, only some detached portions
were to be found in their libraries. Sometimes they were more plentiful, and
the monastery could boast of two or three copies, besides a few separate
portions, and occasionally I have met with instances where besides
several Biblia Optima, they enjoyed Hebrew codices and translations,
with numerous copies of the gospels.
We must not forget, however, that the transcription of a Bible was a work
of time, and required the outlay of much industry and wealth.
"Brother Tedynton", a monk of Ely,
commenced a Bible in 1396, and was several years before he completed it. The
magnitude of the undertaking can scarcely be imagined by those unpracticed in
the art of copying, but when the monk saw the long labor of his pen before him,
and looked upon the well bound strong clasped volumes, with their clean vellum
folios and fine illuminations, he seemed well repaid for his years of toil and
tedious labor, and felt a glow of pious pleasure as he contemplated his happy
acquisition, and the comfort and solace which he should hereafter derive from
its holy pages! We are not surprised then, that a Bible in those days should be
esteemed so valuable, and capable of realizing a considerable sum. The monk, independent
of its spiritual value, regarded it as a great possession, worthy of being
bestowed at his death, with all the solemnity of a testamentary process, and of
being gratefully acknowledged by the fervent prayers of the monkish brethren.
Kings and nobles offered it as an appropriate and generous gift, and bishops
were deemed benefactors to their church by adding it to the library. On its
covers were written earnest exhortations to the Bible student, admonishing the
greatest care in its use, and leveling anathemas and excommunications upon any
one who should dare to purloin it. For its greater security it was frequently
chained to a reading desk, and if a duplicate copy was lent to a neighboring
monastery they required a large deposit, or a formal bond for its safe return.
These facts, while they show its value, also prove how highly it was esteemed
among them, and how much the monks loved the Book of Life.
But how different is the picture now—how opposite all this appears to the
aspect of bible propagation in our own time. Thanks to the printing-press, to
bible societies, and to the benevolence of God, we cannot enter the humblest
cottage of the poorest peasant without observing the Scriptures on his little
shelf—not always read, it is true—nor always held in veneration as in the old
days before us—its very plentitude and cheapness takes off its attraction
to irreligious and indifferent readers, but to poor and needy Christians what
words can express the fulness of the blessing. Yet while we thank God
for this great boon, let us refrain from casting uncharitable reflections upon
the monks for its comparative paucity among them. If its possession was not so
easily acquired, they were nevertheless true lovers of the Bible, and preserved
and multiplied it in dark and troublous times.
Our remarks have hitherto applied to the monastic scribes alone; but it is
necessary here to speak of the secular copyists, who were an important class
during the middle ages, and supplied the functions of the bibliopole of the
ancients. But the transcribing trade numbered three or four distinct branches.
There were the Librarii, Antiquarii, Notarii,
and the Illuminators — occasionally these professions were all
united in one — where perseverance or talent had acquired a knowledge of these
various arts. There appears to have been considerable competition between these
contending bodies. The notarii were
jealous of the librarii, and the librarii in their turn were envious of
the antiquarii, who devoted their
ingenuity to the transcription and repairing of old books especially, rewriting
such parts as were defective or erased, and restoring the dilapidations of the
binding. Being learned in old writings they corrected and revised the copies of
ancient codices; of this class we find mention as far back as the time of
Cassiodorus and Isidore. "They deprived," says Astle, "the poor librarii,
or common scriptores, of great part of
their business, so that they found it difficult to gain a subsistence for
themselves and their families. This put them about finding out more expeditious
methods of transcribing books. They formed the letters smaller, and made use of
more conjugations and abbreviations than had been usual. They proceeded in this
manner till the letters became exceedingly small and extremely difficult to be
read." The fact of there existing a
class of men, whose fixed employment or profession was solely confined to the
transcription of ancient writings and to the repairing of tattered copies, in
contradistinction to the common scribes, and depending entirely upon the
exercise of their art as a means of obtaining a subsistence, leads us to the
conclusion that ancient manuscripts were by no means so very scarce in those
days; for how absurd and useless it would have been for men to qualify
themselves for transcribing these antiquated and venerable codices, if there
had been no probability of obtaining them to transcribe. The fact too of
its becoming the subject of so much competition proves how great was the demand
for their labor (In the year 1300 the pay of a common scribe was about one
half-penny a day).
We are unable, with any positive result, to discover the exact origin of
the secular scribes, though their existence may probably be referred to a very
remote period. The monks seem to have monopolized for some ages the "Commercium Librorum," and sold and bartered copies to a
considerable extent among each other (in some orders the monks were not allowed
to sell their books without the express permission of their superiors.
According to a statute of the year 1264 the Dominicans were strictly prohibited
from selling their books or the rules of their order). We may with some
reasonable grounds, however, conjecture that the profession was flourishing in
Saxon times; for we find several eminent names in the seventh and eighth
centuries who, in their epistolary correspondence, beg their friends to procure
transcripts for them.
Benedict, Bishop of Wearmouth, purchased
most of his book treasures at Rome, which was even at that early period
probably a famous mart for such luxuries, as he appears to have journeyed there
for that express purpose. Some of the books which he collected were presents
from his foreign friends; but most of them, as Bede tells us, were bought by
himself, or in accordance with his instructions, by his friends. Boniface, the
Saxon missionary, continually writes for books to his associates in all parts
of Europe. At a subsequent period the extent and importance of the profession
grew amazingly; and in Italy its followers were particularly numerous in the
tenth century, as we learn from the letters of Gerbert,
afterwards Silvester II, who constantly writes, with the cravings of
a bibliomaniac, to his friends for books, and begs them to get the scribes,
who, he adds, in one of his letters, may be found in all parts of Italy, both
in town and in the country, to make transcripts of certain books for him, and
he promises to reimburse his correspondent all that he expends for the same.
These public scribes derived their principal employment from the monks and
the lawyers; from the former in transcribing their manuscripts, and by the
latter in drawing up their legal instruments. They carried on their avocation
at their own homes like other artisans; but sometimes when employed by the
monks executed their transcripts within the cloister, where they were boarded,
lodged, and received their wages till their work was done. This was especially
the case when some great book was to be copied, of rarity and price; thus we
read of Paulinus, of St. Albans, sending into distant parts to obtain
proficient workmen, who were paid so much per diem for their labor; their wages
were generously supplied by the Lord of Redburn.
Booksellers in the middle ages
The increase of knowledge and the foundation of the universities gave birth
to the booksellers. Their occupation as a distinct trade originated at a period
coeval with the foundation of these public seminaries, although the first
mention that I am aware of is made by Peter of Blois, about the year 1170. I
shall have occasion to speak more hereafter of this celebrated scholar, but I
may be excused for giving the anecdote here, as it is so applicable to my
subject. It appears, then, that whilst remaining in Paris to transact some
important matter for the King of England, he entered the shop of "a public
dealer in books"—for be it known that the archdeacon was always on the
search, and seldom missed an opportunity of adding to his library—the
bookseller, Peter tells us, offered him a tempting collection on Jurisprudence;
but although his knowledge of such matters was so great that he did not require
them for his own use, he thought they might be serviceable to his nephew, and
after bargaining a little about the price he counted down the money agreed upon
and left the stall; but no sooner was his back turned than the Provost of Sexeburgh came in to look over the literary stores of
the stationer, and his eye meeting the recently sold volume, he became inspired
with a wish to possess it; nor could he, on hearing it was bought and paid for
by another, suppress his anxiety to obtain the treasure; but, offering more
money, actually took the volume away by force. As may be supposed, Archdeacon
Peter was sorely annoyed at this behavior; and "To his dearest companion
and friend Master Arnold of Blois, Peter of Blois Archdeacon of Bath sent
greeting", a long and learned letter, displaying his great knowledge of
civil law, and maintaining the illegality of the provost's conduct. The casual
way in which this is mentioned make it evident that the "publico mangone Librorum" was no unusual personage in those days,
but belonged to a common and recognized profession.
The vast number of students who, by the foundation of universities, were
congregated together, generated of course a proportionate demand for books,
which necessity or luxury prompted them eagerly to purchase: but there were
poor as well as rich students educated in these great seminaries of learning,
whose pecuniary means debarred them from the acquisition of such costly
luxuries; and for this and other cogent reasons the universities deemed it
advantageous, and perhaps expedient, to frame a code of laws and regulations to
provide alike for the literary wants of all classes and degrees. To effect this
they obtained royal sanction to take the trade entirely under their protection,
and eventually monopolized a sole legislative power over the Librarii.
In the college of Navarre a great quantity of ancient documents are
preserved, many of which relate to this curious subject. They were deposited
there by M. Jean Aubert in 1623, accompanied by an inventory of them,
divided into four parts by the first four letters of the alphabet. In the
fourth, under D. 18, there is a chapter entitled "Des Libraires Appretiateurs, Jurez et Enlumineurs," which contains much interesting
matter relating to the early history of bookselling. These ancient statutes,
collected and printed by the University in the year 1652, made at various
times, and ranging between the years 1275 and 1403, give us a clear insight
into the matter.
The nature of a bookseller's business in those days required no ordinary
capacity, and no shallow store of critical acumen; the purchasing of
manuscripts, the work of transcription, the careful revisal, the preparation of
materials, the tasteful illuminations, and the process of binding, were each
employments requiring some talent and discrimination, and we are not surprised,
therefore, that the avocation of a dealer and fabricator of these treasures
should be highly regarded, and dignified into a profession, whose followers
were invested with all the privileges, freedoms and exemptions, which the
masters and students of the university enjoyed. But it required these
conciliations to render the restrictive and somewhat severe measures, which she
imposed on the bookselling trade, to be received with any degree of favor or
submission. For whilst the University of Paris, by whom these statutes were
framed, encouraged and elevated the profession of the librarii,
she required, on the other hand, a guarantee of their wealth and mental
capacity, to maintain and to appreciate these important concessions; the
bookseller was expected indeed to be well versed in all branches of science,
and to be thoroughly imbued with a knowledge of those subjects and works of
which he undertook to produce transcripts. She moreover required of him
testimonials to his good character, and efficient security, ratified by a
solemn oath of allegiance, and a promise to observe and submit to all the
present and future laws and regulations of the university.
In some cases, it appears that she restricted the number of librarii, though this fell into disuse as the wants
of the students increased. Twenty-four seems to have been the original number,
which is sufficiently great to lead to the conclusion that bookselling was a
flourishing trade in those old days. By the statutes of the university, the
bookseller was not allowed to expose his transcripts for sale, without first
submitting them to the inspection of certain officers appointed by the
university, and if an error was discovered, the copies were ordered to be burnt
or a fine levied on them, proportionate to their inaccuracy. Harsh and
stringent as this may appear at first sight, we shall modify our opinion, on
recollecting that the student was in a great degree dependent upon the care of
the transcribers for the fidelity of his copies, which rendered a rule of this
nature almost indispensable; nor should we forget the great service it bestowed
in maintaining the primitive accuracy of ancient writers, and in transmitting
them to us through those ages in their original purity.
In these times of free trade and unrestrained commercial policy, we shall
regard less favorably a regulation which they enforced at Paris, depriving the
bookseller of the power of fixing a price upon his own goods. Four booksellers
were appointed and sworn in to superintend this department, and when a new
transcript was finished, it was brought by the bookseller, and they discussed
its merits and fixed its value, which formed the amount the bookseller was
compelled to ask for it; if he demanded of his customer a larger sum, it was
deemed a fraudulent imposition, and punishable as such. Moreover, as an
advantage to the students, the bookseller was expected to make a considerable
reduction in his profits in supplying them with books; by one of the laws of the
university, his profit on each volume was confined to four deniers to student,
and six deniers to a common purchaser. The librarii were
still further restricted in the economy of their trade, by a rule which forbade
any one of them to dispose of his entire stock of books without the consent of
the university; but this, I suspect, implied the disposal of the stock and
trade together, and was intended to intimate that the introduction of the
purchaser would not be allowed, without the cognizance and sanction of the
university. Nor was the bookseller able to purchase books without her consent,
lest they should be of an immoral or heretical tendency; and they were
absolutely forbidden to buy any of the students, without the permission of the
rector.
But restricted as they thus were, the book merchants nevertheless grew
opulent, and transacted an important and extensive trade; sometimes they
purchased parts and sometimes they had whole libraries to sell. Their dealings
were conducted with unusual care, and when a volume of peculiar rarity or
interest was to be sold, a deed of conveyance was drawn up with legal
precision, in the presence of authorized witnesses.
In those days of high prices and book scarcity, the poor student was sorely
impeded in his progress; to provide against these disadvantages, they framed a
law in 1342, at Paris, compelling all public booksellers to keep books to lend
out on hire. The reader will be surprised at the idea of a circulating library
in the middle ages! but there can be no doubt of the fact, they were
established at Paris, Toulouse, Vienna, and Bologne.
These public librarians, too, were obliged to write out regular catalogues of
their books and hang them up in their shops, with the prices affixed, so that
the student might know beforehand what he had to pay for reading them. I am
tempted to give a few extracts from these lists:
· St. Gregory's Commentaries upon Job, for reading 100 pages, 8 sous.
· St. Gregory's Book of Homilies, 28 pages for 12 deniers.
· Isidore's De Summa bona, 24
pages, 12 deniers.
· Anselm's De Veritate de Libertate Arbitrii, 40 pages, 2
sous.
· Peter Lombard's Book of Sentences, 3 sous.
· Scholastic History, 3 sous.
· Augustine's Confessions, 21 pages, 4 deniers.
· Gloss on Matthew, by brother Thomas Aquinas, 57 pages, 3 sous.
· Bible
Concordance, 9 sous.
· Bible,
10 sous.
This rate of charge was also fixed by the university, and the students
borrowing these books were privileged to transcribe them if they chose; if any
of them proved imperfect or faulty, they were denounced by the university, and
a fine imposed upon the bookseller who had lent out the volume.
This potent influence exercised by the universities over booksellers
became, in time, much abused, and in addition to these commercial restraints,
they assumed a still less warrantable power over the original productions of
authors; and became virtually the public censors of books, and had the power of
burning or prohibiting any work of questionable orthodoxy. In the time of Henry
the Second, a book was published by being read over for two or three successive
days, before one of the universities, and if they approved of its doctrines and
bestowed upon it their approbation, it was allowed to be copied extensively for
sale.
Stringent as the university rules were, as regards the bookselling trade,
they were, nevertheless, sometimes disregarded or infringed; some ventured to
take more for a book than the sum allowed, and, by prevarication and secret
contracts, eluded the vigilance of the laws. Some were still bolder, and openly
practiced the art of a scribe and the profession of a bookseller, without
knowledge or sanction of the university. This gave rise to much jealousy, and
in the University of Oxford, in the year 1373, they made a decree forbidding
any person exposing books for sale without her license.
Now, considering all these usages of early bookselling, their numbers,
their opulence, and above all, the circulating libraries which the librarii established, can we still retain the
opinion that books were so inaccessible in those ante-printing days, when we
know that for a few sous the booklover could obtain good and
authenticated copies to peruse, or transcribe? It may be advanced that these
facts solely relate to universities, and were intended merely to insure a
supply of the necessary books in constant requisition by the students, but such
was not the case; the librarii were
essentially public Librorum Venditores, and were glad to dispose of their goods to
any who could pay for them. Indeed, the early bibliomaniacs usually flocked to
these book marts to rummage over the stalls, and to collect their choice
volumes. Richard de Bury obtained many in this way, both at Paris and at Rome.
Of the exact pecuniary value of books during the middle ages, we have no
means of judging. The few instances that have accidentally been recorded are
totally inadequate to enable us to form an opinion. The extravagant estimate
given by some as to the value of books in those days is merely conjectural, as
it necessarily must be, when we remember that the price was guided by the
accuracy of the transcription, the splendor of the binding, which was often
gorgeous to excess, and by the beauty and richness of the illuminations. Many
of the manuscripts of the middle ages are magnificent in the extreme. Sometimes
they inscribed the gospels and the venerated writings of the fathers with
liquid gold, on parchment of the richest purple, and adorned its brilliant
pages with illuminations of exquisite workmanship.
Calligraphic art
The first specimens we have of an attempt to embellish manuscripts are
Egyptian. It was a common practice among them at first to color the initial
letter of each chapter or division of their work, and afterwards to introduce
objects of various kinds into the body of the manuscript.
The splendor of the ancient calligraphical productions of Greece,
and the still later ones of Rome, bear repeated testimony that the practice of
this art had spread during the sixth century, if not earlier, to these powerful
empires. England was not tardy in embracing this elegant art. We have many
relics of remote antiquity and exquisite workmanship existing now, which prove
the talent and assiduity of our early Saxon forefathers.
IN Ireland the illuminating art was profusely practiced at a period as
early as the commencement of the seventh century, and in the eighth we find it
holding forth eminent claims to our respect by the beauty of their workmanship,
and the chastity of their designs. Those well versed in the study of these
ancient manuscripts have been enabled, by extensive but minute observation, to
point out their different characteristics in various ages, and even to decide
upon the school in which a particular manuscript was produced.
These illuminations, which render the early manuscripts of the monkish ages
so attractive, generally exemplify the rude ideas and tastes of the time. In
perspective they are wofully deficient, and
manifest but little idea of the picturesque or sublime; but here and there we
find quite a gem of art, and, it must be owned, we are seldom tired by monotony
of coloring, or paucity of invention. A study of these parchment illustrations
afford considerable instruction. Not only do they indicate the state of the
pictorial art in the middle ages, but also give us a comprehensive insight into
the scriptural ideas entertained in those times; and the bible student may
learn much from pondering on these glittering pages; to the historical student,
and to the lover of antiquities, they offer a verdant field of research, and he
may obtain in this way many a glimpse of the manners and customs of those old
times which the pages of the monkish chroniclers have failed to record.
But all this prodigal decoration greatly enhanced the price of books, and
enabled them to produce a sum, which now to us sounds enormously extravagant.
Moreover, it is supposed that the scarcity of parchment limited the number of books
materially, and prevented their increase to any extent; but I am prone to doubt
this assertion, for my own observations do not help to prove it. Mr. Hallam
says, that in consequence of this, "an unfortunate practice gained ground
of erasing a manuscript in order to substitute another on the same skin. This
occasioned, probably, the loss of many ancient authors who have made way for
the legends of saints, or other ecclesiastical rubbish." But we may
reasonably question this opinion, when we consider the value of books in the
middle ages, and with what esteem the monks regarded, in spite of all their
paganism, those "heathen dogs" of the ancient world. A doubt has
often forced itself upon my mind when turning over the "crackling leaves"
of many ancient MSS., whether the peculiarity mentioned by Montfaucon, and described as parchment from which former
writing had been erased, may not be owing, in many cases, to its mode of
preparation. It is true, a great proportion of the membrane on which the
writings of the middle ages are inscribed, appear rough and uneven, but I could
not detect, through many manuscripts of a hundred folios—all of which evinced
this roughness—the unobliterated remains of a single letter. And when
I have met with instances, they appear to have been short writings—perhaps
epistles; for the monks were great correspondents, and, I suspect, kept economy
in view, and often carried on an epistolary intercourse, for a considerable
time, with a very limited amount of parchment, by erasing the letter to make
room for the answer. This, probably, was usual where the matter of their
correspondence was of no especial importance; so that, what our modern critics,
being emboldened by these faint traces of former writing, have declared to
possess the classic appearance of hoary antiquity, may be nothing more than a
complimentary note, or the worthless accounts of some monastic expenditure.
But, careful as they were, what would these monks have thought of
"paper-sparing Pope", who wrote his Iliad on small pieces of refuse
paper? One of the finest passages in that translation, which describes the
parting of Hector and Andromache, is written on part of a letter which Addison
had franked, and is now preserved in the British Museum. Surely he could
afford, these old monks would have said, to expend some few shillings for
paper, on which to inscribe that for which he was to receive his thousand
pounds.
But far from the monastic manuscripts displaying a scantiness of parchment,
we almost invariably find an abundant margin, and a space between each line
almost amounting to prodigality; and to say that the "vellum was
considered more precious than the genius of the author," is absurd, when
we know that, in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, a dozen skins of parchment
could be bought for sixpence; whilst that quantity written upon, if the subject
possessed any interest at all, would fetch considerably more, there always
being a demand and ready sale for books.
The supposition, therefore, that the monastic scribes erased classical
manuscripts for the sake of the material, seems altogether improbable, and
certainly destitute of proof. It is true, many of the classics, as we have them
now, are but mere fragments of the original work. For this, however, we have
not to blame the monks, but barbarous invaders, ravaging flames, and the petty
animosities of civil and religious warfare for the loss of many valuable works
of the classics. By these means, one hundred and five books of Livy have been
lost to us, probably forever. For the thirty which have been preserved, our
thanks are certainly due to the monks.
It was from their unpretending and long-forgotten libraries that many such
treasures were brought forth at the revival of learning, in the fifteenth
century, to receive the admiration of the curious, and the study of the erudite
scholar. In this way Poggio Bracciolini discovered many inestimable manuscripts.
Leonardo Aretino writes in rapturous terms on Poggio's discovery
of a perfect copy of Quintillian. "What a
precious acquisition!" he exclaims, "what unthought of
pleasure to behold Quintillian perfect and
entire!"
In the same letter we learn that Poggio had
discovered Asconius and Flaccus in the monastery of St. Gall, whose
inhabitants regarded them without much esteem. In the monastery of Langres, his researches were rewarded by a copy of Cicero's
Oration for Cæcina. With the assistance of Bartolomeo di Montepulciano,
he discovered Silius Italicus, Lactantius, Vegetius, Nonius Marcellus,
Ammianus Marcellus, Lucretius, and Columella, and he found in a monastery
at Rome a complete copy of Turtullian. In the
fine old monastery of Casino, so renowned for its classical library in former
days, he met with Julius Frontinus and Firmicus, and transcribed them with his own hand. At
Cologne he obtained a copy of Petronius Arbiter. But to these we may add Calpurnius's Bucolic, Manilius, Lucius Septimus, Coper, Eutychius,
and Probus. He had anxious hopes of adding a perfect Livy to the list,
which he had been told then existed in a Cistercian Monastery in Hungary, but,
unfortunately, he did not prosecute his researches in this instance with his
usual energy. The scholar has equally to regret the loss of a perfect Tacitus,
which Poggio had expectations of from the
hands of a German monk.
We may still more deplore this, as there is every probability that the
monks actually possessed the precious volume. Nicolas of Treves, a contemporary
and friend of Poggio's, and who was infected,
though in a slight degree, with the same passionate ardor for collecting
ancient manuscripts, discovered, whilst exploring the German monasteries,
twelve comedies of Plautus, and a fragment of Aulus Gellius. Had it not been for the timely aid of these great
men, many would have been irretrievably lost in the many revolutions and
contentions that followed; and, had such been the case, the monks, of course,
would have received the odium, and on their heads the spleen of the
disappointed student would have been prodigally showered.
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