CRISTO RAUL.ORG 'READING HALL: THE DOORS OF WISDOM 2022 |
BIBLIOMANIA IN THE MIDDLE AGES
CHAPTER VI Old Glastonbury Abbey. Its Library. John of Taunton.
Richard Whiting. Malmsbury. Bookish Monks of
Gloucester Abbey. Leofric of Exeter and his private
library. Peter of Blois. Extracts from his letters.
Old Glastonbury Abbey. Its Library.
The fame of Glastonbury Abbey will attract the steps of the western
traveller; and if he possess the spirit of an antiquary, his eye will long
dwell on those mutilated fragments of monkish architecture. The bibliophile
will regard it with still greater love; for, in its day, it was one of the most
eminent repositories of those treasures which it is his province to collect.
For more than ten hundred years that old fabric has stood there, exciting in
days of remote antiquity the veneration of our pious forefathers, and in modern
times the admiration of the curious. Pilgrim! tread lightly on that hallowed
ground! sacred to the memory of the most learned and illustrious of our Saxon
ancestry. The bones of princes and studious monks closely mingle with the ruins
which time has caused, and bigotry helped to desecrate. Monkish tradition
claims, as the founder of Glastonbury Abbey, St. Joseph of Arimathea,
who, sixty-three years after the incarnation of our Lord, came to spread the
truths of the Gospel over the island of Britain. Let this be how it may, we leave
it for more certain data.
After, says a learned antiquary, its having been built by St. Davis,
Archbishop of Menevia, and then again restored by
"twelve well affected men in the north"; it was entirely pulled down
by Ina, king of the West Saxons, who "new builded the abbey of Glastonbury in a fenny place out of the
way, to the end the monks mought so much the more
give their minds to heavenly things,
and chiefly use the contemplation meete for men of such profession. This was the fourth
building of that monastery". The king completed
his good work by erecting a beautiful chapel, garnished with numerous ornaments
and utensils of gold and silver; and among other costly treasures, William of Malmsbury tells us that twenty pounds and sixty marks of
gold was used in making a coopertoria for a book of
the Gospels
Would that I had it in my power to write the literary history of
Glastonbury Abbey; to know what the monks of old there transcribed would be to
acquire the history of learning in those times; for there was little worth
reading in the literature of the day that was not copied by those industrious
scribes. But if our materials will not enable us to do this, we may catch a
glimpse of their well stored shelves through the kindness and care of William Britone the Librarian, who compiled a work of the highest
interest to the biographer. It is no less than a catalogue of the books
contained in the common library of the abbey in the year one thousand two
hundred and forty-eight. Four hundred choice volumes comprise this fine
collection; and will not the reader be surprised to find among them a selection
of the classics, with the chronicles, poetry, and romantic productions of the
middle ages, besides an abundant store of the theological writings of the
primitive Church. But I have not transcribed a large proportion of this list,
as the extracts given from other monastic catalogues may serve to convey an
idea of their nature; but I cannot allow one circumstance connected with this
old document to pass without remark. I would draw the reader's attention to the
fine bibles which commence the list, and which prove that the monks of
Glastonbury Abbey were fond and devoted students of the Bible. It begins with—
Bibliotheca una in duobus voluminibus.
Alia Bibliotheca integra vetusta, set legibilis.
Bibliotheca integræ minoris litteræ.
Dimidia pars Bibliothecæ incipiens à Psalterio, vetusta.
Bibliotheca magna versificata.
Alia versificata in duobus voluminibus.
Bibliotheca tres versificata.
But besides these, the library contained numerous detached books and
many copies of the Gospels, an ample collection of the fathers, and the controversal writings of the middle ages; and among many
others, the following classics—
· Aristotle.
· Livy.
· Orosius.
· Sallust.
· Donatus.
· Sedulus.
· Virgil's Æneid.
· Virgil's Georgics.
· Virgil's Bucolics.
· Æsop.
· Tully.
· Boethius.
· Plato.
· Isagoge of Porphyry.
· Prudentius.
· Fortuanus.
· Persius.
· Pompeius.
· Isidore.
· Smaragdius.
· Marcianus.
· Horace.
· Priscian.
· Prosper.
· Aratores.
· Claudian.
· Juvenal.
· Cornutus.
I must not omit to mention that John de Taunton, a monk and an
enthusiastic amator librorum,
and who was elected abbot in the year 1271, collected forty choice volumes, and
gave them to the library, dedit librario,
of the abbey; no mean gift, I ween, in the thirteenth
century. They included—
· Questions on the Old and New Law.
· St. Augustine upon Genesis.
· Ecclesiastical Dogmas.
· St. Bernard's Enchiridion.
· St. Bernard's Flowers.
· Books of Wisdom, with a Gloss.
· Postil's upon Jeremiah and the lesser Prophets.
· Concordances to the Bible.
· Postil's of Albertus upon Matthew, and
the Lamentations of Jeremiah and others, in one volume.
· Postil's upon Mark.
· Postil's upon John, with a Discourse on the Epistles throughout
the year.
· Brother Thomas Old and New Gloss.
· Morabilius on the Gospels and Epistles.
· St. Augustine on the Trinity.
· Epistles of Paul glossed.
· St. Augustine's City of God.
· Kylwardesby upon the Letter of the
Sentences.
· Questions concerning Crimes.
· Perfection of the Spiritual Life.
· Brother Thomas' Sum of Divinity, in four volumes.
· Decrees and Decretals.
· A Book of Perspective.
· Distinctions of Maurice.
· Books of Natural History, in two volumes.
· Book on the Properties of Things.
Subsequent to this, in the time of one book-loving abbot, an addition of
forty-nine volumes was made to the collection by his munificence and the
diligence of his scribes; and time has allowed the modern bibliophile to gaze
on a catalogue of these treasures. I wish the monkish annalist had recorded the
life of this early bibliomaniac, but unfortunately we know little of him. But
they were no mean nor paltry volumes that he transcribed. It is with pleasure I
see the catalogue commenced by a copy of the Holy Scriptures; and the many
commentaries upon them by the fathers of the church enumerated after it, prove
my Lord Abbot to have been a diligent student of the Bible. Nor did he seek God
alone in his written word; but wisely understood that his Creator spoke to him
also by visible works; and probably loved to observe the great wisdom and
design of his God in the animated world; for a Pliny's Natural History stands
conspicuous on the list, as the reader will perceive.
· The Bible.
· Pliny's Natural History.
· Cassiodorus upon the Psalms.
· Three great Missals.
· Two Reading Books.
· A Breviary for the Infirmary.
· Jerome upon Jeremiah and Isaiah.
· Origen upon the Old Testament.
· Origen's Homilies.
· Origen upon the Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans.
· Jerome upon the Epistles to the Galatians, to Ephesians, to
Titus, and to Philemon.
· Lives of the Fathers.
· Collations of the Fathers.
· Breviary for the Hospital.
· An Antiphon.
· Pars una Moralium.
· Cyprian's Works.
· Register.
· Liber dictus Paradisus.
· Jerome against Jovinian.
· Ambrose against Novatian.
· Seven Volumes of the Passions of the Saints for the circle of the
whole year.
· Lives of the Cæsars.
· Acts of the Britons.
· Acts of the English.
· Acts of the Franks.
· Pascasius.
· Radbert on the Body and Blood of the
Lord.
· Book of the Abbot of Clarevalle de Amando Deo.
· Hugo de S. Victore de duodecim gradibus Humilitatis et de
Oratione.
· Physiomania Lapedarum et Liber Petri Alsinii in uno volumine.
· Rhetoric, two volumes.
· Quintilian de Causes, in one volume.
· Augustine upon the Lord's Prayer and upon the Psalm Miserero mei Deus.
· A Benedictional.
· Decreta Cainotensis Episcopi.
· Jerome upon the Twelve Prophets, and upon the Lamentations of
Jeremiah.
· Augustine upon the Trinity.
· Augustine upon Genesis.
· Isidore's Etymology.
· Paterius.
· Augustine on the Words of our Lord.
· Hugo on the Sacraments.
· Cassinus on the Incarnation of our
Lord.
· Anselm's Cui Deus Homo.
John of Taunton. Richard Whiting.
The reader, I think, will allow that the catalogue enumerates but little
unsuitable for a christian's study; he may not admire
the principles contained in some of them, or the superstition with which many
of them are loaded; but after all there were but few volumes among them from
which a Bible reading monk might not have gleaned something good and
profitable. These books were transcribed about the end of the thirteenth
century, after the catalogue of the monastic library mentioned above was
compiled.
Walter Taunton, elected in the year 1322, gave to the library several
volumes; and his successor, Adam Sodbury, elected in
the same year, increased it with a copy of the whole Bible, a Scholastic
history, Lives of Saints, a work on the Properties of Things, two costly
Psalters, and a most beautifully bound Benedictional.
But doubtless many a bookworm nameless in the page of history, dwelled
within those walls apart from worldly solicitude and strife; relieving what
would otherwise have been an insupportable monotony, with sweet converse, with
books, or the avocations of a scribe.
Well, years rolled on, and this fair sanctuary remained in all its
beauty, encouraging the trembling christian, and
fostering with a mother's care the literature and learning of the time. Thus it
stood till that period, so dark and unpropitious for monkish ascendency, when
Protestant fury ran wild, and destruction thundered upon the heads of those
poor old monks! A sad and cruel revenge for enlightened minds to wreck on
mistaken piety and superstitious zeal. How widely was the fine library
scattered then. Even a few years after its dissolution, when Leland spent some
days exploring the book treasures reposing there, it had been broken up, and
many of them lost; yet still it must have been a noble library, for he tells us
that it was "scarcely equalled in all
Britain"; and adds, in the spirit of a true bibliomaniac, that he no
sooner passed the threshold than the very sight of so many sacred remains of
antiquity struck him with awe and astonishment. The reader will naturally wish
that he had given us a list of what he found there; but he merely enumerates a
selection of thirty-nine, among which we find a Grammatica Eriticis, formerly belonging to Saint Dunstan; a life
of Saint Wilfrid; a Saxon version of Orosius, and the writings of William of Malmsbury.
The antiquary will now search in vain for any vestige of the abbey library;
even the spot on which it stood is unknown to the curious.
No christian, let his creed be what it may,
who has learnt from his master the principles of charity and love, will refuse
a tear to the memory of Richard Whiting, the last of Glastonbury's abbots. Poor
old man! Surely those white locks and tottering limbs ought to have melted a
Christian heart; but what charity or love dwelt within the soul of that
rapacious monarch? Too old to relinquish his long cherished superstitions; too
firm to renounce his religious principles, Whiting offered a firm opposition to
the reformation. The fury of the tyrant Henry was aroused, and that grey headed
monk was condemned to a barbarous death. As a protestant I blush to write it,
yet so it was; after a hasty trial, if trial it can be called, he was dragged
on a hurdle to a common gallows erected on Torr Hill,
and there, in the face of a brutal mob, with two of his companion monks, was he
hung! Protestant zeal stopped not here, for when life had fled they cut his
body down, and dividing it into quarters, sent one to each of the four
principal towns; and as a last indignity to that mutilated clay, stuck his head
on the gate of the old abbey, over which he had presided with judicious care in
the last days of his troubled life. It was Whiting's wish to bid adieu in
person to his monastery, in which in more prosperous times he had spent many a
quiet hour; it is said that even this, the dying prayer of that poor old man,
they refused to grant.
On viewing the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey, so mournful to look upon, yet
so splendid in its decay, we cannot help exclaiming with Michael Dayton,—
"On whom for this sad waste, should justice lay the crime."
Malmsboury Abbey
Whilst in the west we cannot pass unnoticed the monastery of Malmsbury, one of the largest in England, and which
possessed at one time an extensive and valuable library; but it was sadly
ransacked at the Reformation, and its vellum treasures sold to the bakers to
heat their stoves, or applied to the vilest use; not even a catalogue was
preserved to tell the curious of a more enlightened age, what books the old
monks read there; but perhaps, and the blood runs cold as the thought arises in
the mind, a perfect Livy was among them, for a rare amator librorum belonging to this monastery, quotes one of
the lost Decades. I allude to William of Malmsbury,
one of the most enthusiastic bibliomaniacs of his age. From his youth he dwelt
within the abbey walls, and received his education there. His constant study
and indefatigable industry in collecting and perusing books, was only equalled by his prudence and by his talents; he soon rose
in the estimation of his fellow monks, who appointed him their librarian, and ultimately
offered him the abbacy, which he refused with Christian humility, fearing too,
lest its contingent duties would debar him from a full enjoyment of his
favorite avocation; but of his book passion let William of Malmsbury speak for himself: "A long period has elapsed since, as well through the
care of my parents as my own industry, I became familiar with books. This
pleasure possessed me from my childhood; this source of delight has grown with
my years; indeed, I was so instructed by my father, that had I turned aside to
other pursuits, I should have considered it as jeopardy to my soul, and
discredit to my character. Wherefore, mindful of the adage, 'covet what is
necessary,' I constrained my early age to desire eagerly that which it was
disgraceful not to possess. I gave indeed my attention to various branches of
literature, but in different degrees. Logic, for instance, which gives arms to
eloquence, I contented myself with barely learning: medicine, which ministers
to the health of the body, I studied with somewhat more attention. But now,
having scrupulously examined the various branches of ethics, I bow down to its
majesty, because it spontaneously inverts itself to those who study it, and
directs their minds to moral practice, history more especially; which by a
certain agreeable recapitulation of past events, excites its readers by
example, to frame their lives to the pursuit of good or to aversion from evil.
When, therefore, at my own expense I had procured some historians of foreign
nations, I proceeded during my domestic leisure, to inquire if anything
concerning our own country could be found worthy of handing down to posterity.
Hence it arose, that not content with the writings of ancient times, I began
myself to compose, not indeed to display my learning, which is comparatively
nothing, but to bring to light events lying concealed in the confused mass of
antiquity. In consequence, rejecting vague opinions, I have studiously sought
for chronicles far and near, though I confess I have scarcely profited anything
by this industry; for perusing them all I still remained poor in information,
though I ceased not my researches as long as I could find anything to
read."
Having read this passage, I think my readers will admit that William of Malmsbury well deserves a place among the bibliomaniacs of
the middle ages. As an historian his merit is too generally known and
acknowledged to require an elucidation here. He combines in most cases a strict
attention to fact, with the rare attributes of philosophic reflection, and
sometimes the bloom of eloquence. But simplicity of narrative constitute the
greatest and sometimes the only charm in the composition of the monkish
chroniclers. William of Malmsbury aimed at a more
ambitious style, and attempted to adorn, as he admits himself, his English
history with Roman art; this he does sometimes with tolerable elegance, but too
often at the cost of necessary detail. Yet still we must place him at the head
of the middle age historians, for he was diligent and critical, though perhaps
not always impartial; and in matters connected with Romish doctrine, his testimony is not always to be relied upon without additional
authority; his account of those who held opinions somewhat adverse to the
orthodoxy of Rome is often equivocal; we may even suspect him of interpolating
their writings, at least of Alfric, whose homilies
had excited the fears of the Norman ecclesiastics. His works were compiled from
many sources now unknown; and from the works of Bede, the Saxon chronicles, and Florilegus, he occasionally transcribes with little
alteration.
But is it not distressing to find that this talented author, so superior
in other respects to the crude compilers of monkish history, cannot rise above
the superstition of the age? Is it not deplorable that a mind so gifted could
rely with fanatical zeal upon the verity of all those foul lies of Rome called
"Holy" miracles; or that he could conceive how God would vouchsafe to
make his saints ridiculous in the eyes of man, by such gross absurdities as
tradition records, but which Rome deemed worthy of canonization; but it was
then, as now, so difficult to conquer the prejudices of early teaching. With
all our philosophy and our science, great men cannot do it now; even so in the
days of old; they were brought up in the midst of superstition; sucked it as it
were from their mother's breast, and fondly cradled in its belief; and as soon
as the infant mind could think, parental piety dedicated it to God; not,
however, as a light to shine before men, but as a candle under a bushel; for to
serve God and to serve monachism were synonymous
expressions in those days.
The west of England was honored by many a monkish bibliophile in the
middle ages. The annals of Gloucester abbey record the names of several. Prior
Peter, who became abbot in the year 1104, is said to have enclosed the
monastery with a stone wall, and greatly enriched it with many books "copia librorum." A few years
after (ad 1113), Godeman the Prior was made abbot,
and the Saxon Chronicle records that during his time the tower was set on fire
by lightning and the whole monastery was burnt; so that all the valuable things
therein were destroyed except a "few books and three priest's
mass-hackles." Abbot Gamage gave many books to
the library in the year 1306; and Richard de Stowe, during the same century,
gave the monks a small collection in nine or ten volumes; a list of them is preserved
in an old manuscript.
Leofric of Exeter and his private library.
But earlier than this in the eleventh century, a bishop of Exeter stands
remarkable as an amator librorum. Leofric, the last bishop of Crediton,
and "sometime lord chancellor of England," received permission from
Edward the Confessor to translate the seat of his diocese to the city of Exeter
in the year 1050. "He was brought up and studied in Lotharingos,"
says William of Malmsbury, and he manifested his
learning and fondness for study by collecting books. Of the nature of his
collections we are enabled to judge by the volumes he gave to the church of
Exeter. The glimpse thus obtained lead us to consider him a curious
book-collector; and it is so interesting to look upon a catalogue of a bishop's
private library in that early time, and to behold his tastes and his pursuits
reflected and mirrored forth therein, that I am sure the reader will be
gratified by its perusal. After enumerating some broad lands and a glittering
array of sumptuous ornaments, he is recorded to have given to the church
"Two complete mass books; 1 Collectarium; 2
Books of Epistles (Pistel Bec);
2 complete Sang Bec; 1 Book of night sang; 1 Book unus liber, a Breviary or Tropery;
2 Psalters; 3 Psalters according to the Roman copies; 2 Antiphoners;
A precious book of blessings; 3 others; 1 Book of Christ in English; 2 Summer
Reading bec; 1 Winter ditto; Rules and Canons; 1 Martyrology; 1 Canons in Latin; 1 Confessional in English;
1 Book of Homilies and Hymns for Winter and Summer; 1 Boethius on the
Consolation of Philosophy, in English (King Alfred's translation); 1 Great Book
of Poetry in English; 1 Capitular; 1 Book of very
ancient nocturnal sangs; 1 Pistel bec; 2 Ancient ræding bec; 1 for the use of the priest; also the following books
in Latin, viz., 1 Pastoral of Gregory; 1 Dialogues of Gregory; 1 Book of the
Four Prophets; 1 Boethius Consolation of Philosophy; 1 Book of the offices of Amalar; 1 Isagoge of Porphyry; 1 Passional; 1 book of Prosper; 1 book of Prudentius the Martyr; 1 Prudentius; 1 Prudentius (de Mrib.); 1 other book; 1 Ezechael the Prophet; 1 Isaiah the Prophet; 1 Song of Songs; 1 Isidore Etymology; 1
Isidore on the New and Old Testament; 1 Lives of the Apostles; 1 Works of Bede;
1 Bede on the Apocalypse; 1 Bede's Exposition on the Seven Canonical Epistles;
1 book of Isidore on the Miracles of Christ; 1 book of Orosius;
1 book of Machabees; 1 book of Persius;
1 Sedulus; 1 Avator; 1 book
of Statius with a gloss."
Such were the books forming a part of the private library of a bishop of
Exeter in the year of grace 1073. Few indeed when compared with the vast
multitudes assembled and amassed together in the ages of printed literature.
But these sixty or seventy volumes, collected in those times of dearth, and
each produced by the tedious process of the pen, were of an excessive value,
and mark their owner as distinctly an amator librorum, as the enormous piles heaped together in modern
times would do a Magliabechi. Nor was Leofric an ordinary collector; he loved to preserve the
idiomatic poetry of those old Saxon days; his ancient sang bec,
or song books, would now be deemed a curious and precious relic of Saxon
literature. One of these has fortunately escaped the ravages of time and the
fate of war. "The great boc of English
Poetry" is still preserved at Exeter—one of the finest relics of Anglo
Saxon poetry extant. Mark too those early translations which we cannot but
regard with infinite pleasure, and which satisfactorily prove that the Gospels
and Church Service was at least partly read and sung in the Saxon church in the
common language of the people; let the Roman Catholics say what they will. But
without saying much of his church books, we cannot but be pleased to find the
Christian Boethius in his library with Bede, Gregory, Isidore, Prosper, Orosius, Prudentius, Sedulus, Persius and Statius;
these are authors which retrieve the studies of Leofric from the charge of mere monastic lore.
Peter of Blois.
But good books about this time were beginning to be sought after with
avidity. The Cluniac monks, who were introduced into
England about the year 1077, more than one hundred and sixty years after their
foundation, gave a powerful impetus to monastic learning; which received
additional force by the enlightened efforts of the Cistercians, instituted in
1098, and spread into Britain about the year 1128. These two great branches of
the Benedictine order, by their great love of learning, and by their zeal in
collecting books, effected a great change in the monkish literature of England.
"They were not only curious and attentive in forming numerous libraries,
but with indefatigable assiduity transcribed the volumes of the ancients, l'assiduité infatigable à transcrire les livres des anciens, say the Benedictines of St. Maur",
who perhaps however may be suspected of regarding their ancient brethren in
rather too favorable a light. But certain it is, that the state of literature
became much improved, and the many celebrated scholars who flourished in the
twelfth century spread a taste for reading far and wide, and by their example
caused the monks to look more eagerly after books.
Peter of Blois, Archdeacon of London, is one of the most pleasing
instances of this period, and his writings have even now a freshness and
vivacity about them which surprise as they interest the reader. This
illustrious student, and truly worthy man, was born at Blois in the early part
of the twelfth century. His parents, who were wealthy and noble, were desirous
of bestowing upon their son an education befitting their own rank; for this
purpose he was sent to Paris to receive instruction in the general branches of
scholastic knowledge. He paid particular attention to poetry, and studied
rhetoric with still greater ardor. But being designed for the bar, he left
Paris for Bologna, there to study civil law; and succeeded in mastering all the
dry technicalities of legal science. He then returned to Paris to study
scholastic divinity, in which he became eminently proficient, and was ever
excessively fond. He remained at Paris studying deeply himself, and instructing
others for many years. About the year 1167 he went with Stephen, Count de Perche, into Sicily, and was appointed tutor to the young
King William II., made keeper of his private seal, and for two years conducted
his education. Soon after leaving Sicily, he was invited by Henry II. into
England, and made Archdeacon of Bath. It was during the time he held that
office that he wrote most of these letters, from which we obtain a knowledge of
the above facts, and which he collected together at the particular desire of
King Henry; who ever regarded him with the utmost
kindness, and bestowed upon him his lasting friendship. I know not a more
interesting or a more historically valuable volume than these epistolary
collections of Archdeacon Peter. They seem to bring those old times before us,
to seat us by the fire-sides of our Norman forefathers, and in a pleasant,
quiet manner enter into a gossip on the passing events of the day; and being
written by a student and an amator librorum, they moreover unfold to us the state of learning
among the ecclesiastics at least of the twelfth century; and if we were to take
our worthy archdeacon as a specimen, they possessed a far better taste for
these matters than we usually give them credit for. Peter of Blois was no
ordinary man; a churchman, he was free from the prejudices of churchmen—a
visitant of courts and the associate of royalty, he was yet free from the
sycophancy of a courtier—and when he saw pride and ungodliness in the church,
or in high places, he feared not to use his pen in stern reproof at these
abominations. It is both curious and extraordinary, when we bear in mind the
prejudices of the age, to find him writing to a bishop upon the looseness of
his conduct, and reproving him for his inattention to the affairs of his
diocese, and upbraiding another for displaying an unseemly fondness for
hunting, and other sports of the field; which he says is so disreputable to one
of his holy calling, and quotes an instance of Pope Nicholas suspending and
excluding from the church Bishop Lanfred for a
similar offence; which he considers even more disgraceful in Walter, Lord
Bishop of Winchester, to whom he is writing, on account of his advanced age; he
being at that time eighty years old. We are constantly reminded in reading his
letters that we have those of an indefatigable student before us; almost every
page bears some allusion to his books or to his studies, and prove how well and
deeply read he was in Latin literature; not merely the theological writings of
the church, but the classics also. In one of his letters he speaks of his own
studies, and tells us that when he learnt the art of versification and correct
style, he did not spend his time on legends and fables, but took his models
from Livy, Quintus Curtius, Trogus Pompeius, Josephus, Tacitus, Suetonius, and other
classics; in the same letter he gives some directions to the Archdeacon of
Nantes, who had undertaken the education of his nephews, as to the manner of
their study. He had received from the archdeacon a flattering account of the
progress made by one of them named William, to which he thus replies—"You
speak," says he, "of William—his great penetration and ingenious
disposition, who, without grammar or the authors of science, which are both so
desirable, has mastered the subtilties of logic, so
as to be esteemed a famous logician, as I learn by your letter. But this is not
the foundation of a correct knowledge—these subtilties which you so highly extol, are manifoldly pernicious,
as Seneca truly affirms,—Odibilius nihil est subtilitate ubi est solœ subtilitas. What indeed is the use of these things in
which you say he spends his days—either at home, in the army, at the bar, in
the cloister, in the church, in the court, or indeed in any position whatever,
except, I suppose, the schools?" Seneca says, in writing to Lucalius, "Quid est, inquit acutius arista et in quo est utiles!" In many letters
we find him quoting the classics with the greatest ease, and the most
appropriate application to his subject; in one he refers to Ovid, Persius, and Seneca, and in others, when writing in a most
interesting and amusing manner of poetic fame and literary study, he extracts
from Terence, Ovid, Juvenal, Horace, Plato, Cicero, Valerius Maximus, Seneca, etc. In another, besides a constant use of Scripture, which
proves how deeply read too he was in Holy Writ, he quotes with amazing
prodigality from Juvenal, Frontius, Vigetius, Dio, Virgil, Ovid,
Justin, Horace, and Plutarch. Indeed, Horace was a great favorite with the
archdeacon, who often applied some of his finest sentences to illustrate his
familiar chat and epistolary disquisitions. It is worth noticing that in one he
quotes the Roman history of Sallust, in six books, which is now lost, save a
few fragments; the passage relates to Pompey the Great. We can scarcely refrain
from a smile at the eagerness of Archdeacon Peter in persuading his friends to
relinquish the too enticing study of frivolous plays, which he says can be of
no service to the interest of the soul; and then, forgetting this admonition,
sending for tragedies and comedies himself, that he might get them transcribed.
This puts one in mind of a certain modern divine, whose conduct not agreeing
with his doctrine, told his hearers not to do as he did, but as he told them.
It appears also equally ludicrous to find him upbraiding a monk, named Peter of
Blois, for studying the pagan authors: "the foolish old fables of Hercules
and Jove," their lies and philosophy; when, as we have seen, he read them
so ravenously, and so greatly borrowed from them himself. But then we must bear
in mind that the archdeacon had also well stored his mind with Scripture, and
certainly always deemed that the first and most important of all his studies,
which was perhaps not the case with the monk to whom he writes. In some of his
letters we have pleasing pictures of the old times presented to us, and it is
astonishing how homely and natural they read, after the elapse of 700 years. In
more than one he launches out in strong invectives against the lawyers, who in
all ages seems to have borne the indignation of mankind; Peter accuses them of
selling their knowledge for hire, to the direct perversion of all justice; of
favoring the rich and oppressing the poor. He reproves Reginald, Archdeacon of
Salisbury, for occupying his time with falconry, instead of attending to his
clerical duties; and in another, a most interesting letter, he gives a
description of King Henry II., whose character he extols in panegyric terms,
and proves how much superior he was in learning to William II of Sicily. He
says that "Henry, as often as he could breathe from his care and
solicitudes, he was occupied in secret reading; or at other times joined by a
body of clergy, would try to solve some elaborate question quæstiones laborat evolvere."
Frequently we find him writing about books, begging transcripts, eagerly
purchasing them; and in one of his letters to Alexander, Abbot of Jenniege, Gemiticensem, he
writes, apologizing, and begging his forgiveness for not having fulfilled his
promise in returning a book which he had borrowed from his library, and begs
that his friend will yet allow him to retain it some days longer. The last days
of a scholar's life are not always remarkable, and we know nothing of those of
Archdeacon Peter; for after the death of Henry II, his intellectual worth found
no royal mind to appreciate it. The lion-hearted Richard thought more of the
battle axe and crusading than the encouragement of literature or science; and
Peter, like many other students, grown old in their studies, was left in his
age to wander among his books, unmolested and uncared for. With the friendship
of a few clerical associates, and the archdeaconry of London, which by the bye
was totally unproductive, he died, and for many ages was forgotten. But a
student's worth can never perish; a time is certain to arrive when his
erudition will receive its due reward of human praise. We now, after a slumber
of many hundred years, begin to appreciate his value, and to entertain a hearty
friendship and esteem for the venerable Archdeacon Peter.
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