BIBLIOMANIA
IN THE MIDDLE AGES
by
F. SOMNER MERRYWEATHER
with
an Introduction by
CHARLES ORR
CHAPTERS
I Introductory Remarks. Monachism. Book Destroyers.
Effects of the Reformation on Monkish Learning, etc.
II Duties of the monkish librarian. Rules of the
library. Lending books. Books allowed the monks for private reading. Ridiculous
signs for books. How the libraries were supported. A monkish blessing on books,
etc.
III Scriptoria and the Scribes. Care in copying. Bible
reading among the monks. Booksellers in the middle ages. Circulating libraries.
Calligraphic art, etc.
IV Canterbury Monastery.
Theodore of Tarsus. Tatwine. Nothelm. St. Dunstan. Ælfric. Lanfranc. Anselm.
St. Augustine's books. Henry de Estria and his Catalogue. Chiclely. Sellinge.
Rochester. Gundulph, a Bible Student. Radulphus. Ascelin of Dover. Glanvill
V Lindesfarne. St. Cuthbert's Gospels. Destruction
of the Monastery. Alcuin’s Letter on the occasion. Removal to Durham.
Carelepho. Catalogue of Durham Library. Hugh de Pusar. Anthony Bek. Richard de
Bury and his Philobiblon, etc.
VI Croyland Monastery. Its Library increased by
Egebric. Destroyed by Fire. Peterborough. Destroyed by the Danes. Benedict and
his books. Anecdotes of Collectors. Catalogue of the Library of the Abbey of
Peterborough. Leicester Library, etc.
VII King Alfred an “amator librorum” and an author.
VIII Benedict Biscop and his book
tours. Bede. Ceolfrid. Wilfrid. Boniface the Saxon Missionary: His love of
books. Egbert of York.Alcuin. Whitby Abbey. Cædmon. Classics in the Library of
Withby. Rievall Library. Coventry. Worcester. Evesham. Thomas of Marleberg,
etc.
IX 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.
Proved to have been a great classical student, etc., etc.
X Winchester famous for its Scribes. Ethelwold and
Godemann. Anecdotes. Library of the Monastery of Reading. The Bible. Library of
Depying Priory. Effects of Gospel Reading. Catalogue of Ramsey Library. Hebrew
MSS. Fine Classics, etc. St. Edmund's Bury. Church of Ely. Canute, etc.
XI St. Alban’s. Willigod. Bones of St. Alban. Eadmer.
Norman Conquest. Paul and the Scriptorium. Geoffry de Gorham. Brekspere the
“Poor Clerk”. Abbot Simon and his “multis voluminibus”. Raymond the Prior.
Wentmore. Whethamstede. Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester. Lydgate. Guy, Earl of
Warwick.
XII The Dominicans. The Franciscans and the
Carmelites. Scholastic Studies. Robert Grostest. Libraries in London. Miracle
Plays. Introduction of Printing into England. Barkley's Description of a
Bibliomaniac.
XIII Conclusion.
INTRODUCTION
In every century for more than two thousand years,
many men have owed their chief enjoyment of life to books. The bibliomaniac of
today had his prototype in ancient Rome, where book collecting was fashionable
as early as the first century of the Christian era. Four centuries earlier
there was an active trade in books at Athens, then the center of the book
production of the world. This center of literary activity shifted to Alexandria
during the third century BC through the patronage of Ptolemy Soter, the
founder of the Alexandrian Museum, and of his son, Ptolemy Philadelphus; and
later to Rome, where it remained for many centuries, and where bibliophiles and
bibliomaniacs were gradually evolved, and from whence in time other countries
were invaded.
For the purposes of the present work the middle ages
cover the period beginning with the seventh century and ending with the time of
the invention of printing, or about seven hundred years, though they are more accurately
bounded by the years 500 and 1500 AD. It matters little, however,
since there is no attempt at chronological arrangement.
About the middle of the present century there began to
be a disposition to grant to medieval times their proper place in the history
of the preservation and dissemination of books, and Merryweather’s Bibliomania
in the Middle Ages was one of the earliest works in English devoted to
the subject. Previous to that time, those ten centuries lying between the fall
of the Roman Empire and the revival of learning were generally referred to as
the Dark Ages, and historians and other writers were wont to treat them as
having been without learning or scholarship of any kind.
Even Mr. Hallam, with all that judicial temperament
and patient research to which we owe so much, could find no good to say of the
Church or its institutions, characterizing the early university as the abode of
“indigent vagabonds withdrawn from usual labor”, and all monks as positive
enemies of learning.
Introduction
to the Literature of Europe.
The gloomy survey of Mr. Hallam, clouded no doubt by
his antipathy to all things ecclesiastical, served, however, to arouse the
interest of the period, which led to other studies with different results, and
later writers were able to discern below the surface of religious fanaticism
and superstition so characteristic of those centuries, much of interest in the
history of literature; to show that every age produced learned and inquisitive
men by whom books were highly prized and industriously collected for their own
sakes; in short, to rescue the period from the stigma of absolute illiteracy.
If the reader cares to pursue the subject further,
after going through the fervid defense of the love of books in the middle ages,
of which this is the introduction, he will find outside of its chapters
abundant evidence that the production and care of books was a matter of great
concern. In the pages of Mores Catholici;
or Ages of Faith, by Mr. Kenelm Digby, or of The Dark Ages; a Series of Essays
Intended to Illustrate the State of Religion and Literature in the Ninth,
Tenth, Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries, by Dr. S. R. Maitland, or of
that great work of recent years, Books
and their Makers during the Middle Ages a Study of the Conditions of the Production and Distribution of
Literature from the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Close of the Seventeenth
Century, by Mr. George Haven Putnam, he will see vivid and
interesting portraits of a great multitude of medieval worthies who were almost
lifelong lovers of learning and books, and zealous laborers in preserving,
increasing and transmitting them. And though little of the mass that has come
down to us was worthy of preservation on its own account as literature, it is
exceedingly interesting as a record of centuries of industry in the face of
such difficulties that to workers of a later period might have seemed
insurmountable.
A further fact worthy of mention is that book
production was from the art point of view fully abreast of the other arts
during the period, as must be apparent to anyone who examines the collections
in some of the libraries of Europe. Much of this beauty was wrought for the
love of the art itself. In the earlier centuries religious institutions
absorbed nearly all the social intellectual movements as well as the possession
of material riches and land. Kings and princes were occupied with distant wars
which impoverished them and deprived literature and art of that patronage
accorded to it in later times. There is occasional mention, however, of wealthy
laymen, whose religious zeal induced them to give large sums of money for the
copying and ornamentation of books; and there were in the abbeys and convents
lay brothers whose fervent spirits, burning with poetical imagination, sought
in these monastic retreats and the labor of writing, redemption from their past
sins. These men of faith were happy to consecrate their whole existence to the
ornamentation of a single sacred book, dedicated to the community, which gave
them in exchange the necessaries of life.
The labor of transcribing was held, in the
monasteries, to be a full equivalent of manual labor in the field. The rule of
St. Ferreol, written in the sixth century, says that, “He who does not
turn up the earth with the plough ought to write the parchment with his
fingers”.
Mention has been made of the difficulties under which
books were produced; and this is a matter which we who enjoy the conveniences
of modern writing and printing can little understand. The hardships of the scriptorium were greatest, of course, in winter. There were no fires in the often damp and
ill-lighted cells, and the cold in some of the parts of Europe where books were
produced must have been very severe. Parchment, the material generally used for
writing upon after the seventh century, was at some periods so scarce that copyists
were compelled to resort to the expedient of effacing the writing on old and
less esteemed manuscripts. The form of writing was stiff and regular and
therefore exceedingly slow and irksome.
The arts in
the Middle Ages and the Renaissance by Paul Lacroix
In some of the monasteries the scriptorium was at
least at a later period, conducted more as a matter of commerce, and making of
books became in time very profitable. The Church continued to hold the keys of
knowledge and to control the means of productions; but the cloistered cell,
where the monk or the layman, who had a penance to work off for a grave sin,
had worked in solitude, gave way to the apartment specially set aside, where
many persons could work together, usually under the direction of a librarius or
chief scribe. In the more carefully constructed monasteries this apartment was
so placed as to adjoin the calefactory, which allowed the introduction of hot
air, when needed.
The seriousness with which the business of copying was
considered is well illustrated by the consecration of the scriptorium which was
often done in words which may be thus translated: “Vouchsafe, O Lord, to bless
this work-room of thy servants, that all which they write therein may be
comprehended by their intelligence and realized in their work”.
While the work of the scribes was largely that of
copying the scriptures, gospels, and books of devotion required for the service
of the church, there was a considerable trade in books of a more secular kind.
Particularly was this so in England. The large measure of attention given to
the production of books of legends and romances was a distinguishing feature of
the literature of England at least three centuries previous to the invention of
printing. At about the twelfth century and after, there was a very large
production and sale of books under such headings as chronicles, satires,
sermons, works of science and medicine, treatises on style, prose romances and
epics in verse. Of course a large proportion of these were written in or
translated from the Latin, the former indicating a pretty general knowledge of
that language among those who could buy or read books at all. That this
familiarity with the Latin tongue was not confined to any particular country is
abundantly shown by various authorities.
Christopher Plantin, and the Plantin-Moretus museum at Antwerp
Mr. Merryweather, whose book, as has been
intimated, is only a defense of bibliomania itself as it actually existed in
the middle ages, gives the reader but scant information as to processes of
book-making at that time. But thanks to the painstaking research of others,
these details are now a part of the general knowledge of the development of the
book. The following, taken from Mr. Theodore De Vinne’s Invention
of Printing, will, we think, be found interesting:
“The size most in fashion was that now known as the
demy folio, of which the leaf is about ten inches wide and fifteen inches long,
but smaller sizes were often made. The space to be occupied by the written text
was mapped out with faint lines, so that the writer could keep his letters on a
line, at even distance from each other and within the prescribed margin. Each
letter was carefully drawn, and filled in or painted with repeated touches of
the pen. With good taste, black ink was most frequently selected for the text;
red ink was used only for the more prominent words, and the catch-letters, then
known as the rubricated letters. Sometimes texts were written in blue, green,
purple, gold or silver inks, but it was soon discovered that texts in bright
color were not so readable as texts in black.
“When the copyist had finished his sheet he passed it
to the designer, who sketched the border, pictures and initials. The sheet was
then given to the illuminator, who painted it. The ornamentation of
a medieval book of the first class is beyond description by words or
by wood cuts. Every inch of space was used. Its broad margins were filled with
quaint ornaments, sometimes of high merit, admirably painted in vivid colors.
Grotesque initials, which, with their flourishes, often spanned the full height
of the page, or broad bands of floriated tracery that occupied its entire
width, were the only indications of changes of chapter or subject. In printer’s
phrase the composition was close-up and solid to the extreme degree of
compactness. The uncommonly free use of red ink for the smaller initials was
not altogether a matter of taste; if the page had been written entirely in
black ink it would have been unreadable through its blackness. This nicety in
writing consumed much time, but the medieval copyist was seldom governed by
considerations of time or expense. It was of little consequence whether the
book he transcribed would be finished in one or in ten years. It was required
only that he should keep at his work steadily and do his best. His skill is
more to be commended than his taste. Many of his initials and borders were
outrageously inappropriate for the text for which they were designed. The
gravest truths were hedged in the most childish conceits. Angels, butterflies,
goblins, clowns, birds, snails and monkeys, sometimes in artistic, but much
oftener in grotesque and sometimes in highly offensive positions are to be found
in the illuminated borders of copies of the gospels and writings of the
fathers.
“The book was bound by the forwarder, who sewed the
leaves and put them in a cover of leather or velvet; by the finisher, who
ornamented the cover with gilding and enamel. The illustration of book binding,
published by Amman in his Book of Trades, puts before us many of the
implements still in use. The forwarder, with his customary apron of leather, is
in the foreground, making use of a plow-knife for trimming the edges of a book.
The lying press, which rests obliquely against the block before him, contains a
book that has received the operation of backing-up from a queer shaped hammer
lying upon the floor. The workman at the end of the room is sewing together the
sections of a book, for sewing was properly regarded as a man's work, and a
scientific operation altogether beyond the capacity of the raw seamstress. The
work of the finisher is not represented, but the brushes, the burnishers,
the sprinklers and the wheel-shaped gilding tools hanging against the wall
leave us no doubt as to their use. There is an air of antiquity about
everything connected with this bookbindery which suggests the thought that its
tools and usages are much older than those of
printing. Chevillier says that seventeen professional bookbinders
found regular employment in making up books for the University of Paris, as
early as 1292. Wherever books were produced in quantities, bookbinding was set
apart as a business distinct from that of copying.
“The poor students who copied books for their own use
were also obliged to bind them, which they did in a simple but efficient manner
by sewing together the folded sheets, attaching them to narrow parchment bands,
the ends of which were made to pass through a cover of stout parchment at the
joint near the back. The ends of the bands were then pasted down under the
stiffening sheet of the cover, and the book was pressed. Sometimes the cover
was made flexible by the omission of the stiffening sheet; sometimes the edges
of the leaves were protected by flexible and overhanging flaps which were made
to project over the covers; or by the insertion in the covers of stout leather
strings with which the two covers were tied together. Ornamentation was
entirely neglected, for a book of this character was made for use and not for
show. These methods of binding were mostly applied to small books intended for
the pocket; the workmanship was rough, but the binding was strong and
serviceable”.
The book of Mr. Merryweather, here reprinted, is
thought worthy of preservation in a series designed for the library of the
booklover. Its publication followed shortly after that of the works
of Digby and Maitland, but shows much original research and familiarity
with early authorities; and it is much more than either of these, or of any
book with which we are acquainted, a plea in defense of bibliomania in the
middle ages. Indeed the charm of the book may be said to rest largely upon the
earnestness with which he takes up his self-imposed task. One may fancy that
after all he found it not an easy one; in fact his “Conclusion” is a kind of
apology for not having made out a better case. But this he believes he has
proven, "that with all their superstition, with all their ignorance, their
blindness to philosophic light—the monks of old were hearty lovers of books;
that they encouraged learning, fostered it, and transcribed repeatedly the
books which they had rescued from the destruction of war and time; and so kindly
cherished and husbanded them as intellectual food for posterity. Such being the
case, let our hearts look charitably upon them; and whilst we pity them for
their superstition, or blame them for their pious frauds, love them as brother
men and workers in the mines of literature.”
Of the author himself little can be learned. A
diligent search revealed little more than the entry in the London directory
which, in various years from 1840 to 1850, gives his occupation as that of
bookseller, at 14 King Street, Holborn. Indeed this is shown by the
imprint of the title-page of Bibliomania, which was published in 1849.
He published during the same year Dies Dominicæ, and in 1850 Glimmerings
in the Dark, and Lives and Anecdotes of Misers. The latter has been
immortalized by Charles Dickens as one of the books bought at the bookseller’s
shop by Boffin, the Golden Dustman, and which was read to him by the
redoubtable Silas Wegg during Sunday evenings at
“Boffin’s Bower”.
CHAPTER I
Introductory Remarks
In recent times, in spite of all those outcries which
have been so repeatedly raised against the illiterate state of the dark ages,
many and valuable efforts have been made towards a just elucidation of those
monkish days. These labors have produced evidence of what few anticipated, and
some even now deny, viz., that here and there great glimmerings of learning are
perceivable; and although debased, and often barbarous too, they were not quite
so bad as historians have usually proclaimed them. It may surprise some,
however, that an attempt should be made to prove that, in the olden time
in “merrie Englande”, a passion which Dibdin has christened
Bibliomania, existed then, and that there were many cloistered bibliophiles as
warm and enthusiastic in book collecting as the Doctor himself. But I must here
crave the patience of the reader, and ask him to refrain from denouncing what
he may deem a rash and futile attempt, till he has perused the volume and
thought well upon the many facts contained therein. I am aware that many of these
facts are known to all, but some, I believe, are familiar only to the
antiquary, the lover of musty parchments and the cobwebbed chronicles of a
monastic age.
I have endeavored to bring these facts together to
connect and string them into a continuous narrative, and to extract from them
some light to guide us in forming an opinion on the state of literature in
those ages of darkness and obscurity; and here let it be understood that I
merely wish to give a fact as history records it. I will not commence by saying
the Middle Ages were dark and miserably ignorant, and search for some poor
isolated circumstance to prove it; I will not affirm that this was
pre-eminently the age in which real piety flourished and literature was fondly
cherished, and strive to find all those facts which show its learning,
purposely neglecting those which display its unlettered ignorance: nor let it
be deemed ostentation when I say that the literary anecdotes and bookish
memoranda now submitted to the reader have been taken, where such a course was
practicable, from the original sources, and the references to the authorities
from whence they are derived have been personally consulted and compared.
Monachism
That the learning of the Middle Ages has been
carelessly represented there can be little doubt: our finest writers in the
paths of history have employed their pens in denouncing it; some have allowed
difference of opinion as regards ecclesiastical policy to influence their
conclusions; and because the poor scribes were monks, the most licentious
principles, the most dismal ignorance and the most repulsive crimes have been
attributed to them. If the monks deserved such reproaches from posterity, they
have received no quarter; if they possessed virtues as christians, and honorable
sentiments as men, they have met with no reward in the praise or respect of
this liberal age: they were monks! superstitious priests and followers of Rome!
What good could come of them?
It cannot be denied that there were crimes perpetrated
by men aspiring to a state of holy sanctity; there are instances to be met with
of priests violating the rules of decorum and morality; of monks reveling in
the dissipating pleasures of sensual enjoyments, and of nuns whose frail
humanity could not maintain the purity of their virgin vows. But these
instances are too rare to warrant the slanders and scurrility that historians
have heaped upon them. And when we talk of the sensuality of the monks, of
their gross indulgences and corporeal ease, we surely do so without discrimination;
for when we speak of the middle ages thus, our thoughts are dwelling on the
sixteenth century, its mocking piety and superstitious absurdity; but in the
olden time of monastic rule, before monachism had burst its ancient boundaries,
there was surely nothing physically attractive in the austere and dull monotony
of a cloistered life.
Look at the monk; mark his hard, dry studies, and his
midnight prayers, his painful fasting and mortifying of the flesh; what can we
find in this to tempt the epicure or the lover of indolence and sloth? They
were fanatics, blind and credulous -- I
grant it. They read gross legends, and put faith in traditionary lies -- I
grant it; but do not say, for history will not prove it, that in the middle
ages the monks were wine bibbers and slothful gluttons.
But let not the Protestant reader be too hastily
shocked. I am not defending the monastic system, or the corruption of the
cloister --far from it. I would see the usefulness of man made manifest to the
world; but the measure of my faith teaches charity and forgiveness, and I can
find in the functions of the monk much that must have been useful in those dark
days of feudal tyranny and lordly despotism.
We much mistake the influence of the monks by
mistaking their position; we regard them as a class, but forget from whence
they sprang; there was nothing aristocratic about them, as their constituent
parts sufficiently testify; they were, perhaps, the best representatives of the
people that could be named, being derived from all classes of society. Thus
Offa, the Saxon king, and Caedman, the rustic herdsman, were both monks. These
are examples by no means rare, and could easily be multiplied. Such being the
case, could not the monks more readily feel and sympathize with all, and more
clearly discern the frailties of their brother man, and by kind admonition or
stern reproof, mellow down the ferocity of a Saxon nature, or the proud heart
of a Norman tyrant?
But our object is not to analyze the social influence
of Monachism in the middle ages: much might be said against it, and many evils
traced to the sad workings of its evil spirit, but still withal something may
be said in favor of it, and those who regard its influence in those days
alone may find more to admire and defend than they expected, or their
Protestant prejudices like to own.
But, leaving these things, I have only to deal with
such remains as relate to the love of books in those times. I would show the
means then in existence of acquiring knowledge, the scarcity or plentitude of
books, the extent of their libraries, and the rules regulating them; and bring
forward those facts which tend to display the general routine of a literary
monk, or the prevalence of Bibliomania in those days.
Book Destroyers
It is well known that the great national and private
libraries of Europe possess immense collections of manuscripts, which were
produced and transcribed in the monasteries, during the middle ages, thousands
there are in the rich alcoves of the Vatican at Rome, unknown save to a choice
and favored few; thousands there are in the royal library of France, and
thousands too reposing on the dusty shelves of the Bodleian and Cottonian
libraries in England; and yet, these numbers are but a small portion – a mere
relic-- of the intellectual productions of a past and obscure age.
The barbarians, who so frequently convulsed the more
civilized portions of Europe, found a morbid pleasure in destroying those works
which bore evidence to the mental superiority of their enemies. In England, the
Saxons, the Danes, and the Normans were each successively the destroyers of
literary productions. The Saxon Chronicle, that invaluable repository of the
events of so many years, bears ample testimony to numerous instances of the
loss of libraries and works of art, from fire, or by the malice of designing
foes. At some periods, so general was this destruction, so unquenchable the
rapacity of those who caused it, that instead of feeling surprised at the
manuscripts of those ages being so few and scanty, we have cause rather to
wonder that so many have been preserved. For even the numbers which escaped the
hands of the early and unlettered barbarians met with an equally ignominious
fate from those for whom it would be impossible to hold up the darkness of
their age as a plausible excuse for the commission of this egregious folly. These
men over whose sad deeds the bibliophile sighs with mournful regret, were those
who carried out the Reformation, so glorious in its results; but the
righteousness of the means by which those results were effected are very
equivocal indeed. When men form themselves into a faction and strive for the
accomplishment of one purpose, criminal deeds are perpetrated with impunity,
which, individually they would blush and scorn to do; they feel no direct
responsibility, no personal restraint; and, such as possess fierce passions,
under the cloak of an organized body, give them vent and gratification; and
those whose better feelings lead them to contemplate upon these things content
themselves with the conclusion, that out of evil cometh good.
(In France, in the year 1790, in full Age of Reason,
God bless the Atheism, in the name of Science and Progress, God bless the Academy:
4 million 194 thousand volumes were burnt belonging to the suppressed
monasteries, and about 25,000 of these were manuscripts).
Effects of the Reformation on Monkish Learning, etc.
The noble art of printing was unable, with all its
rapid movements, to rescue from destruction the treasures of the monkish age;
the advocates of the Reformation eagerly sought for and as eagerly destroyed
those old popish volumes, doubtless there was much folly, much exaggerated
superstition pervading them; but there was also some truth, a few facts worth
knowing, and perhaps a little true piety also, and it would have been no
difficult matter to have discriminated between the good and the bad. But the
careless grants of a licentious monarch conferred a monastery on a court
favorite or political partizan without one thought for the preservation of its
contents. It is true a few years after the dissolution of these houses, the
industrious Leland was appointed to search and rummage over their libraries and
to preserve any relic worthy of such an honor; but it was too late, less learned
hands had rifled those parchment collections long ago, mutilated their finest
volumes by cutting out with childish pleasure the illuminations with which they
were adorned; tearing off the bindings for the gold claps which protected the
treasures within, and chopping up huge folios as fuel for their blazing
hearths, and immense collections were sold as waste paper. (In England: “About
this time --Feb. 25, 1550-- the Council book mentions the king’s sending a
letter for the purging his library at Westminster. The persons are not named,
but the business was to cull out all superstitious books, as missals, legends,
and such like, and to deliver the garniture of the books, being either gold or
silver, to Sir Anthony Aucher. These books were many of them plated with gold
and silver and curiously embossed. This, as far as we can collect, was the
superstition that destroyed them. Here avarice had a very thin disguise, and
the courtiers discovered of what spirit they were to a remarkable degree”).
Bale, a strenuous opponent of the monks, thus deplores
the loss of their books: “Never had we been offended for the loss of our
libraries being so many in number and in so desolate places for the most part,
if the chief monuments and most notable works of our excellent writers had been
reserved, if there had been in every shire of England but one solemn library to
the preservation of those noble workers, and preferrement of good learnings in
our posterity it had been yet somewhat. But to destroy all without consideration,
is and will be unto England for ever a most horrible infamy among the grave
seniours of other nation. A great number of them which purchased those
superstitious mansions reserved of those library books, some to serve their
jakes, some to scour their candelstickes, and some to rubbe their boots; some
they sold to the grossers and sope sellers, and some they sent over see to the
bokebinders, not in small number, but at times whole shippes full. I
know a merchant man, which shall at this time be nameless, that bought the
contents of two noble libraries for 11 shillings price, a shame is it to be
spoken. This stuff had he occupyed in the stide of grave paper for the space of
more than these ten years, and yet had store enough for as many years to come.
A prodigious example is this, and to be abhorred of all men who love their
natyon as they should do”.
However pernicious the Roman religion might have been
in its practice, it argues little to the honor of the reformers to have used
such means as this to effect its cure; had they merely destroyed those
productions connected with the controversies of the day, we might perhaps have
excused it, on the score of party feeling; but those who were commissioned to
visit the public libraries of the kingdom were often men of prejudiced
intellects and shortsighted wisdom, and it frequently happened that an ignorant
and excited mob became the executioners of whole collections.
(In the reign of Edward VI: “least their impiety and
foolishness in this act should be further wanting, they brought it to pass that
certain rude young men should carry this great spoil of books about the city on
biers, which being so done, to set them down in the common market place, and
then burn them, to the sorrow of many, as well as of the Protestants as of the
other party. This was by them styled ‘the funeral of Scotus the Scotists’. So
that at this time and all this king's reign was seldom seen anything in the
universities but books of poetry, grammar, idle songs, and frivolous stuff”).
It would be impossible now to estimate the loss.
Manuscripts of ancient and classic date would in their hands receive no more
respect than some dry husky folio on ecclesiastical policy; indeed, they often
destroyed the works of their own party through sheer ignorance. In a letter
sent by Dr. Cox to William Paget, Secretary, he writes that the proclamation
for burning books had been the occasion of much hurt. “For New Testaments and
Bibles (not condemned by proclamation) have been burned, and that, out of
parish churches and good men’s houses. They have burned innumerable of the king’s
majesties books concerning our religion lately set forth”. The ignorant thus
delighted to destroy that which they did not understand, and the factional
spirit of the more enlightened would not allow them to make one effort for the
preservation of those valuable relics of early English literature, which
crowded the shelves of the monastic libraries; the sign of the cross, the use
of red letters on the title page, the illuminations representing saints, or the
diagrams and circles of a mathematical nature, were at all times deemed
sufficient evidence of their popish origin and fitness for the flames.
When we consider the immense number of MSS. thus
destroyed, we cannot help suspecting that, if they had been carefully preserved
and examined, many valuable and original records would have been discovered.
The catalogues of old monastic establishments, although containing a great
proportion of works on divine and ecclesiastical learning, testify that the
monks did not confine their studies exclusively to legendary tales or
superstitious missals, but that they also cultivated a taste for classical and
general learning. Doubtless, in the ruin of the sixteenth century, many
original works of monkish authors perished, and the splendor of the transcript
rendered it still more liable to destruction; but I confess, as old Fuller
quaintly says, that “there were many volumes full fraught with superstition
which, notwithstanding, might be useful to learned men, except any will deny
apothecaries the privilege of keeping poison in their shops, when they can make
antidotes of them. But besides this, what beautiful bibles! Rare fathers!
Subtle schoolmen! Useful historians! Ancient! Middle! Modern! What painful comments
were here amongst them! What monuments of mathematics all massacred together!”
More than a cart load of manuscripts were taken away
from Merton College and destroyed, and a vast number from the Baliol and New
Colleges, Oxford; but these instances might be infinitely multiplied, so
terrible were those intemperate outrages. All this tends to enforce upon us the
necessity of using considerable caution in forming an opinion of the nature and
extent of learning prevalent during those ages which preceded the discovery of
the art of printing.
CHAPTER II
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?
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 anyone without
the distinct permission of the abbot. This was, doubtless, practiced by all the
monastic libraries, for all generously lent one another their 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, AD 1343, to a neighboring monastery, containing twenty volumes.
The engagement to restore these books was formally drawn up and sealed.
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; Bibliothecae 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
vainglory 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.
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.”
CHAPTER III
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.
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 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.&mdash 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 i>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 Caecina. 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 Septimius, 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.
CHAPTER IV
Canterbury Monastery
In the foregoing chapters I have endeavored to give
the reader an insight into the means by which the monks multiplied their books,
the opportunities they had of obtaining them, the rules of their libraries and
scriptoria, and the duties of a monkish librarian. I now proceed to notice some
of the English monastic libraries of the middle ages, and by early records and
old manuscripts inquire into their extent, and revel for a time among the
bibliomaniacs of the cloisters. On the spot where Christianity—more than twelve
hundred years ago—first obtained a permanent footing in Britain, stands the
proud metropolitan cathedral of Canterbury—a venerable and lasting monument of
ancient piety and monkish zeal. St. Augustine, who brought over the glad
tidings of the Christian faith in the year 596, founded that noble structure on
the remains of a church which Roman Christians in remote times had built there.
To write the literary history of its old monastery would spread over more pages
than this volume contains, so many learned and bookish abbots are mentioned in
its monkish annals. Such, however, is beyond the scope of my present design,
and I have only to turn over those ancient chronicles to find how the love of
books flourished in monkish days; so that, whilst I may here and there pass
unnoticed some ingenious author, or only casually remark upon his talents, all
that relate to libraries or book-collecting, to bibliophiles or scribes, I
shall carefully record; and, I think, from the notes now lying before me, and
which I am about to arrange in something like order, the reader will form a
very different idea of monkish libraries than he previously entertained.
Theodore of Tarsus
The name that first attracts our attention in the
early history of Canterbury Church is that of Theodore of Tarsus, the father of
Anglo-Saxon literature, and certainly the first who introduced bibliomania into
this island; for when he came on his mission from Rome in the year 668 he
brought with him an extensive library, containing many Greek and Latin authors,
in a knowledge of which he was thoroughly initiated. Bede tells us that he was
well skilled in metrical art, astronomy, arithmetic, church music, and the
Greek and Latin languages. At his death the library of Christ Church Monastery
was enriched by his valuable books, and in the time of
old Lambarde some of them still remained. He says, in his quaint way,
“The Reverend Father Mathew, nowe Archbishop of Canterburie,
whose care for the conservation of learned monuments can never be sufficiently
commended, showed me, not long since, the Psalter of David,
and sundrie homilies in Greek; Homer also and some
other Greeke authors
beautifully wrytten on thick paper, with the name of this
Theodore prefixed in the front, to whos librarie he reasonably
thought, being thereto led by shew of great antiquitie that
they sometimes belonged.”
Tatwine
Tatwine was a great book lover, if not a bibliomaniac.
“He was renowned for religious wisdom (consecrated on the 10th of June, 731),
and notably learned in Sacred Writ”. If he wrote the many pieces attributed to
him, his pen must have been prolific and his reading curious and diversified.
He is said to have composed on profane and sacred subjects, but his works were
unfortunately destroyed by the Danish invaders, and a book of poems and one of
enigmas are all that have escaped their ravages. The latter work, preserved in
our National Library, contains many curious hints, illustrative of the manners
of those remote days.
Nothelm
Nothelm, or the Bold Helm, succeeded this interesting
author; he was a learned and pious priest of London. The bibliomaniac will
somewhat envy the avocation of this worthy monk whilst searching over the rich
treasures of the Roman archives, from whence he gleaned much valuable
information to aid Bede in compiling his history of the English Church. Not
only was he an industrious scribe but also a talented author, if we are to
believe Pits, who ascribes to him several works, with a Life of St. Augustine.
St. Dunstan
It is well known that St. Dunstan was an ingenious
scribe, and so passionately fond of books, that we may unhesitatingly proclaim
him a bibliomaniac. He was a native of Wessex, and resided with his father
near Glastonbury Abbey, which holy spot many a legendary tale rendered dear to
his youthful heart. He entered the Abbey, and devoted his whole time to reading
the wondrous lives and miracles of ascetic men till his mind became excited to
a state of insanity by the many marvels and prodigies which they unfolded; so
that he acquired among the simple monks the reputation of one holding constant
and familiar intercourse with the beings of another world. On his presentation
to the king, which was effected by the influence of his uncle Athelm, Archbishop
of Canterbury, he soon became a great favorite, but excited so much jealousy
there, that evil reports were industriously spread respecting him. He was
accused of practicing magical arts and intriguing with the devil. This induced
him to retire again into the seclusion of a monastic cell, which he constructed
so low that he could scarcely stand upright in it. It was large enough,
however, to hold his forge and other apparatus, for he was a proficient worker
in metals, and made ornaments, and bells for his church. He was very fond of
music, and played with exquisite skill upon the harp. But what is more to our
purpose, his biographer tells us that he was remarkably skilful in writing and
illuminating, and transcribed many books, adorning them with beautiful paintings,
whilst in this little cell. One of them is preserved in the Bodleian Library at
Oxford. On the front is a painting of St. Dunstan kneeling before our Savior,
and at the top is written “Pictura et
Scriptura hujus pagine subtas visi est de propria manu sei Dunstani”.
But in the midst of these ingenious pursuits he did not forget to devote many
hours to the study of the Holy Scriptures, as also to the diligent
transcription and correction of copies of them, and thus arming himself with
the sacred word, he was enabled to withstand the numerous temptations which
surrounded him. Sometimes the devil appeared as a man, and at other times he
was still more severely tempted by the visitations of a beautiful woman, who
strove by the most alluring blandishments to draw that holy man from the paths
of Christian rectitude. In the tenth century such eminent virtues could not
pass unrewarded, and he was advanced to the Archbishopric of Canterbury in the
year 961, but his after life is that of a saintly politician, and displays
nothing that need be mentioned here.
Ælfric
In the year 969, Ælfric, abbot of St. Alban’s,
was elected archbishop of Canterbury. His identity is involved in considerable
doubt by the many contemporaries who bore that name, some of whom, like him,
were celebrated for their talent and erudition; but, leaving the solution of
this difficulty to the antiquarian, we are justified in saying that he was of
noble family, and received his education under Ethelwold, at Abingdon,
about the year 960. He accompanied his master to Winchester, and Elphegus,
bishop of that see, entertained so high an opinion of Ælfric’s learning
and capacity, that he sent him to superintend the recently founded monastery
of Cerne, in Devonshire. He there spent all his hours, unoccupied by the
duties of his abbatical office, in the transcription of books and the
nobler avocations of an author. He composed a Latin Grammar, a work which has
won for him the title of “The Grammarian”, and he greatly helped to maintain
the purity of the Christian church by composing a large collection of homilies,
which became exceedingly popular during the succeeding century, and are yet in
existence. The preface to these homilies contain several very curious passages
illustrative of the mode of publication resorted to by the monkish authors, and
on that account I am tempted to make the following extracts:
“I, Ælfric, the scholar of Ethelwold, to the
courteous and venerable Bishop Sigeric, in the Lord.
“Although it may appear to be an attempt of some
rashness and presumption, yet have I ventured to translate this book out of the
Latin writers, especially those of the Holy Scriptures, into our common
language; for the edification of the ignorant, who only understand this
language when it is either read or heard. Wherefore I have not used obscure or
unintelligible words, but given the plain English. By which means the hearts,
both of the readers and of the hearers, may be reached more easily; because
they are incapable of being otherwise instructed, than in their native tongue.
Indeed, in our translation, we have not ever been so studious to render word
for word, as to give the true sense and meaning of our authors. Nevertheless,
we have used all diligent caution against deceitful errors, that we may not be
found seduced by any heresy, nor blinded by any deceit. For we have followed
these authors in this translation, namely, St. Austin of Hippo, St. Jerome,
Bede, Gregory, Smaragdus, and sometimes Haymo, whose authority is
admitted to be of great weight with all the faithful. Nor have we only
expounded the treatise of the gospels;... but have also described the passions
and lives of the saints, for the use of the unlearned of this nation. We have
placed forty discourses in this volume, believing this will be sufficient for
one year, if they be recited entirely to the faithful, by the ministers of the
Lord. But the other book which we have now taken in hand to compose will
contain those passions or treatises which are omitted in this volume.” ... “Now,
if any one find fault with our translation, that we have not always given word
for word, or that this translation is not so full as the treatise of the
authors themselves, or that in handling of the gospels we have run them over in
a method not exactly conformable to the order appointed in the church, let him
compose a book of his own; by an interpretation of deeper learning, as shall
best agree with his understanding, this only I beseech him, that he may not
pervert this version of mine, which I hope, by the grace of God, without any
boasting, I have, according to the best of my skill, performed with all
diligence. Now, I most earnestly entreat your goodness, my most gentle
father Sigeric, that you will vouchsafe to correct, by your care, whatever
blemishes of malignant heresy, or of dark deceit, you shall meet with in my
translation, and then permit this little book to be ascribed to your authority,
and not to the meanness of a person of my unworthy character. Farewell in the Almighty
God continually. Amen.”
I have before alluded to the care observed by the
scribes in copying their manuscripts, and the moderns may deem themselves
fortunate that they did so; for although many interpolations, or emendations,
as they called them, occur in monkish transcripts, on the whole, their
integrity, in this respect, forms a redeeming quality
in connexion with their learning. In another preface, affixed to the
second collection of his homilies, Ælfric thus explains his design in
translating them:
“Ælfric, a monk and priest, although a man of less
abilities than are requisite for one in such orders, was sent, in the days of
King Æthelred, from Alphege, the bishop and successor
of Æthelwold, to a monastery which is called Cernel, at the desire of Æthelmer,
the Thane, whose noble birth and goodness is everywhere known. Then ran it in
my mind, I trust, through the grace of God, that I ought to translate this book
out of the Latin tongue into the English language not upon presumption of great
learning, but because I saw and heard much error in many English books, which
ignorant men, through their simplicity, esteemed great wisdom, and because it
grieved me that they neither knew, nor had the gospel learning in their
writing, except from those men that understood Latin, and those books which are
to be had of King Alfred’s, which he skillfully translated from Latin into
English.”
From these extracts we may gain some idea of the state
of learning in those days, and they would seem, in some measure, to justify the
opinion, that the laity paid but little attention to such matters, and I more
anxiously present the reader with these scraps, because they depict the state
of literature in those times far better than a volume of conjecture could do.
It is not consistent with my design to enter into an analysis of these
homilies. Let the reader, however, draw some idea of their nature from the one
written for Easter Sunday, which has been deemed sufficient proof that the
Saxon Church ever denied the Romish doctrine of transubstantiation;
for he there expressly states, in terms so plain that all the sophistry of the
Roman Catholic writers cannot pervert its obvious meaning, that the
bread and wine is only typical of the body and blood of our Savior.
To one who has spent much time in reading the lives
and writings of the monkish theologians, how refreshing is such a character as
that of Ælfric’s. Often, indeed, will the student close the volumes of
those old monastic writers with a sad, depressed, and almost broken heart; so
often will he find men who seem capable of better things, who here and there
breathe forth all the warm aspirations of a devout and Christian heart, bowed
down and grovelling in the dust, as it were, to prove their blind
submission to the Pope, thinking, poor fellows!—for from my very heart I pity
them—that by so doing they were preaching that humility so acceptable to the
Lord.
Cheering then, to the heart it is to find this
monotony broken by such an instance, and although we
find Ælfric occasionally diverging into the paths
of papistical error, he spreads a ray of light over the gloom of
those Saxon days, and offers pleasing evidence that Christ never forsook his
church; that even amidst the peril and darkness of those monkish ages there
were some who mourned, though it might have been in a monastery, submissive to
a Roman Pontiff, the depravity and corruption with which the heart of man had
marred it.
To still better maintain the discipline of the church,
he wrote a set of canons, which he addressed to Wulfin, or Wulfsine,
bishop of Sherbourne. With many of the doctrines advocated therein, the
protestant will not agree; but the bibliophile will admit that he gave an
indication of his love of books by the 21st Canon, which directs that, “Before
a priest can be ordained, he must be armed with the sacred books, for the
spiritual battle, namely, a Psalter, Book of Epistles, Book of Gospels, the
Missal Book, Books of Hymns, the Manual, or Euchiridion, the Gerim,
the Passional, the Pænitential, and the Lectionary, or Reading Book;
these the diligent priest requires, and let him be careful that they are all
accurately written, and free from faults.”
About the same time, Ælfric wrote a treatise
on the Old and New Testaments, and in it we find an account of his labors in
Biblical Literature. He did more in laying open the holy mysteries of the
gospel to the perusal of the laity, by translating them into the Saxon tongue,
than any other before him. He gave them, in a vernacular version, the
Pentateuch, Joshua, Judges, Esther, Job, Judith, two Books of Maccabees, and a
portion of the Book of Kings, and it is for these labors, above all others,
that the bible student will venerate his name, but he will look, perhaps,
anxiously, hopefully, to these early attempts at Bible propagation, and expect
to observe the ecclesiastical orders, at least, shake off a little of their
absurd dependence on secondary sources for biblical instruction. But, no; they
still sadly clung to traditional interpretation; they read the Word of God
mystified by the fathers, good men, many of them, devout and holy saints, but
why approach God through man, when we have His own prescription, in sweet
encouraging words, to come, however humble or lowly we may be, to His throne,
and ask with our own lips for those blessings so needful for the
soul. Ælfric, in a letter addressed to Sigwerd, prefixed to his
Treatise on the Old and New Testament, thus speaks of his biblical labors:
“Abbot Elfricke greeteth friendly, Sigwerd at
last Heolon. True it is I tell thee that very wise is he
who speaketh by his doings; and well proceedeth he doth
with God and the world who furnisheth himselfe with good works.
And very plaine it is in holy scripture, that holy men employed in
well doing were in this world held in good reputation, and as saints now enjoy
the kingdom of heaven, and the remembrance of them continueth for
ever, because of their consent with God and relying on
him, carelesse men who lead their life in all idleness and so end it,
the memory of them is forgotten in holy writ, saving that the Old Testament
records their ill deeds and how they were therefore comdemned. Thou hast
oft entreated me for English Scripture .... and when I was
with thee great mone thou madest that thou
couldst get none of my writings. Now will I that thou have at least this
little, since knowledge is so acceptable to thee, and thou wilt have it rather
than be altogether without my books...... God bestoweth sevenfold
grace on mankind, (whereof I have already written in another English Treatise),
as the prophet Isaiah hath recorded in the book of his prophesie." In
speaking of the remaining books of the Pentateuch, he does so in a cursory
manner, and excuses himself because he had "written thereof more at
large." "The book which Moses wrote, called the book of
Joshua, sheweth how he went with the people of Israel unto Abraham's
country, and how he won it, and how the sun stood still while he got the
victory, and how he divided the land; this book also I turned into English for
prince Ethelverd, wherein a man may behold the great wonders of God really
fulfilled”. ...... “After him known it is that there were in the
land certaine judges over Israel, who guided the people as it is
written in the book of Judges ..... of this whoso hath desire to hear further,
may read it in that English book which I translated concerning the same”. .....
“Of the book of Kings, I have translated also some part into English,"
"the book of Esther, I briefly after my manner translated into English”"
and “The Widow Judith who overcame Holophernes, the Syrian General, hath
her book also, among these, concerning her own victory
and Englished according to my skill for your example, that ye men may
also defend your country by force of arms, against the invasion of a foreign
host”. “Two books of Machabeus, to the glory of God, I have turned also
into English, and so read them, you may if you please, for your instruction”.
And at the end we find him again admonishing the scribes to use the pen with
faithfulness. “Whosoever”, says he, “shall write out this book, let him write
it according to the copy, and for God's love correct it, that it be not faulty,
less he thereby be discredited, and I shent.”
This learned prelate died on the 16th of November,
1006, after a life spent thus in the service of Christ and the cause of
learning; by his will he bequeathed to the Abbey of St. Alban's, besides some
landed possessions, his little library of books; he was honorably buried at
Abingdon, but during the reign of Canute, his bones were removed to Canterbury.
Passing on a few years, we come to that period when a
new light shone upon the lethargy of the Saxons; the learning and erudition
which had been fostering in the snug monasteries of Normandy, hitherto
silent—buried as it were—but yet fast growing to maturity, accompanied the
sword of the Norman duke, and added to the glory of the conquering hero, by
their splendid intellectual endowments. All this emulated and roused the Saxons
from their slumber; and, rubbing their laziness away, they again grasped the
pen with the full nerve and energy of their nature; a reaction ensued,
literature was respected, learning prospered, and copious work flowed in upon
the scribes; the crackling of parchment, and the din of controversy bespoke the
presence of this revival in the cloisters of the English monasteries; books,
the weapons spiritual of the monks, libraries, the magazines of the church
militant were preserved, amassed, and at last deemed indispensable (there was
an old saying, and a true one, prevalent in those days, that a monastery
without a library was like a castle without an armory). Such was the effect on
our national literature of that gushing in of the Norman conquerors, so deeply
imbued with learning, so polished, and withal so armed with classical and
patristic lore were they.
Lanfranc
Foremost in the rank we find the learned Lanfranc,
that patron of literature, that indefatigable scribe and anxious book
collector, who was endowed with an erudition far more deep and comprehensive
than any other of his day. He was born at Pavia, in 1005, and received there
the first elements of his education; he afterwards went to Bologna, and from
thence to Avranches, where he undertook the education of many celebrated
scholars of that century, and instructed them in sacred and secular
learning, in sacris et secularibus erudivi literis.
Whilst proceeding on a journey to Rome he was attacked by some robbers, who
maltreated and left him almost dead; in this condition he was found by some
peasants who conveyed him to the monastery of Bec; the monks with their
usual hospitable charity tended and so assiduously nourished him in his
sickness, that on his recovery he became one of their fraternity. A few years
after, he was appointed prior and founded a school there, which did immense
service to literature and science; he also collected a great library which was
renowned and esteemed in his day, and he increased their value by a critical
revisal of their text.
He was well aware that in works so voluminous as those
of the fathers, the scribes through so many generations could not be expected
to observe an unanimous infallibility; but knowing too that even the most
essential doctrines of the holy and catholic church were founded
on patristical authority, he was deeply impressed with the necessity
of keeping their writings in all their primitive integrity; an end so
desirable, well repaid the tediousness of the undertaking, and he cheerfully
spent much time in collecting and comparing codices, in studying their various
readings or erasing the spurious interpolations, engendered by the carelessness
or the pious frauds of monkish scribes. He lavished his care in a similar
manner on the Bible: considering the far distant period from which that holy
volume has descended to us, it is astounding that the vicissitudes, the perils,
the darkness of near eighteen hundred years, have failed to mar the divinity of
that sacred book; not all the blunders of nodding scribes could do it, not all
the monkish interpolations, or the cunning of sectarian pens could do it, for
in all times the faithful church of Christ watched over it with a jealous care,
supplied each erasure and expelled each false addition. Lanfranc was one of the
most vigilant of these Scripture guards, and his own industry blest his church
with the bible text, purified from the gross handmarks of human
meddling. I learn, from the Benedictines of St. Maur, that there is still
preserved in the Abbey of St. Martin de Sécz, the first ten conferences of
Cassian corrected by the efficient hand of this great critical student, at the
end of the manuscript these words are written, “Hucusque ago Lanfrancus correxi”.
The works of St. Ambrose, on which he bestowed similar care, are preserved in
the library of St. Vincent du Mans.
When he was promoted to the See of
Canterbury, he brought with him a copious supply of books, and spread the
influence of his learning over the English monasteries; but with all the cares
inseparably connected with the dignity of Primate of England, he still found
time to gratify his bookloving propensities, and to continue his
critical labors; indeed he worked day and night in the service of the
church, servitio Ecclesiæ, and in correcting the books which
the scribes had written. From the profusion of his library he was enabled to
lend many volumes to the monks, so that by making transcripts, they might add
to their own stores—thus we know that he lent to Paulen, Abbot of St.
Albans, a great number, who kept his scribes hard at work transcribing them, and
built a scriptorium for the transaction of these pleasing labors; but more of
this hereafter.
Anselm
Anselm, too, was a renowned and book-loving prelate,
and if his pride and haughtiness wrought warm dissensions and ruptures in the
church, he often stole away to forget them in the pages of his book. At an
early age he acquired this fondness for reading, and whilst engaged as a
monkish student, he applied his mind to the perusal of books with wonderful
perseverance, and when some favorite volume absorbed his attention, he could
scarce leave it night or day. Industry so indefatigable ensured a certain
success, and he became eminent for his deep and comprehensive learning; his
epistles bear ample testimony to his extensive reading and intimate
acquaintance with the authors of antiquity; in one of his letters he praises a
monk named Maurice, for his success in study, who was learning Virgil and some other old writers, under Arnulph the grammarian.
All day long Anselm was occupied in giving wise
counsel to those that needed it; and a great part of the night pars
maxima noctis he spent in correcting his darling volumes, and
freeing them from the inaccuracies of the scribes. The oil in the lamp burnt
low, still that bibliomaniac studiously pursued his favorite avocation. So
great was the love of book-collecting engrafted into his mind, that he omitted
no opportunity of obtaining them—numerous instances occur in his epistles of
his begging the loan of some volume for transcription; in more than one, I
think, he asks for portions of the Holy Scriptures which he was always anxious
to obtain to compare their various readings, and to enable him with greater
confidence to correct his own copies.
In the early part of the twelfth century, the monks of
Canterbury transcribed a vast number of valuable manuscripts, in which they
were greatly assisted by monk Edwine, who had arrived at considerable
proficiency in the calligraphical art, as a volume of his
transcribing, in Trinity college, Cambridge, informs us; it is a Latin Psalter,
with a Saxon gloss, beautifully illuminated in gold and colors; at the end
appears the figure of the monkish scribe, holding the pen in his hand to
indicate his avocation, and an inscription extols his ingenuity in the art.
Succeeding archbishops greatly enriched the library at
Canterbury. Hubert Walter, who was appointed primate in 1191, gave the proceeds
of the church of Halgast to furnish books for the library; and
Robert Kildwardly, archbishop in 1272, a man of great learning and wisdom,
a remarkable orator and grammarian, wrote a great number of books, and was
passionately fond of collecting them.
I learn from Wanley, that there is a large folio
manuscript in the library of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, written about the time of
Henry V by a monk of St. Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury, containing the history
of Christ Church; this volume proves its author to have been something of a
bibliophile, and that is why I mention it, for he gives an account of some
books then preserved, which were sent over by Pope Gregory to St. Augustine;
these precious volumes consisted of a Bible in two volumes, called “Biblia Gregorian”,
beautifully written, with some of the leaves tinted with purple and rose-color,
and the capital letters rubricated. This interesting and venerable MS. so
immediately connected with the first ages of the Christian church of Britain,
was in existence in the time of James I, as we learn by a passage in a scarce
tract entitled “A Petition Apologetical”, addressed by the Catholics to
his majesty, where, as a proof that we derive our knowledge of Scripture
originally from the church of Rome; they say, “The very original Bible, the
self-same Numero which St. Gregory sent in with our apostle,
St. Augustine, being as yet reserved by God’s special providence, as testimony
that what Scriptures we have, we had them from Rome”.
He next mentions two Psalters, one of which I have
seen; it is among the manuscripts in the Cotton collection, and bears full
evidence of its great antiquity. This early gem of biblical literature numbers
160 folios; it contains the Roman Psalter, with a Saxon interlinear
translation, written on stout vellum, in a clear, bold hand. On opening the
volume, we find the first page enriched with a dazzling specimen of monkish
skill—it is a painting of our Saviour pointing with his right hand to
heaven, and in his left holding the sacred book; the corners are occupied with
figures of animals, and the whole wrought on a glittering ground work, is
rendered still more gorgeous by the contrast which the purple robes of Jesus
display; on the reverse of this fine illumination there is a
beautiful tesselated ornament, interwoven with animals, flowers, and
grotesque figures, around which are miniatures of our Saviour, David, and
some of the apostles. In a line at the bottom the word CATVSVIR is
inscribed. Very much inferior to this in point of art is the illumination, at
folio 31, representing David playing his harp, surrounded by a musical coterie;
it is probably the workmanship of a more modern, but less skilful scribe of the
Saxon school. The smaller ornaments and initial letters throughout the
manuscript display great intricacy of design.
The writer next describes two copies of the Gospels,
both now in the Bodleian Collection at Oxford. A Passionarium Sanctorum,
a book for the altar, on one side of which was the image of our Savior wrought
in gold, and lastly, an exposition of the Epistles and Gospels; the monkish
bookworm tells us that these membranous treasures were the most ancient books
in all the churches of England.
Henry de Estria and his Catalogue
A good and liberal monk, named Henry De Estria,
who was elected prior in the year 1285, devoted both his time and wealth to the
interests of his monastery, and is said to have expended £900 in repairing the
choir and chapter-house. He wrote a book beginning, “Memoriale Henerici Prioris Monasteri Xpi Cantuariæ”,
now preserved in the Cotton collection; it contains the most extensive monastic
catalogue I had ever seen, and sufficiently proves how Bibliomania flourished
in that noble monastery. It occupies no less than thirty-eight treble-columned
folio pages, and contains the titles of more than three thousand works. To
attempt to convey to the reader an idea of this curious and sumptuous library,
without transcribing a large proportion of its catalogue, I am afraid will be a
futile labor; but as that would occupy too much space, and to many of my
readers be, after all, dry and uninteresting, I shall merely give the names of
some of the most conspicuous. Years indeed it must have required to have
amassed a collection so brilliant and superb in those days of book scarcity.
Surprise and wonder almost surpass the admiration we feel at beholding this
proud testimonial of monkish industry and early bibliomania. Many a choice
scribe, and many an Amator Librorum must have devoted his
pen and purse to effect so noble an acquisition. Like most of the monastic
libraries, it possessed a great proportion of biblical literature—copies of the
Bible whole and in parts, commentaries on the same, and numerous glossaries and
concordances show how much care the monks bestowed on the sacred writings, and
how deeply they were studied in those old days. In patristic learning the
library was unusually rich, embracing the most eminent and valuable writings of
the Fathers, as may be seen by the following names, of whose works the
catalogue enumerates many volumes:
· Augustine.
· Ambroise.
· Anselm.
· Alcuin.
· Aldelm.
· Benedict.
· Bernard.
· Bede.
· Beranger.
· Chrysostom.
· Eusebius.
· Fulgentius.
· Gregory.
· Hillarius.
· Isidore.
· Jerome.
· Lanfranc.
· Origen.
Much as we may respect them for all this, our
gratitude will materially increase when we learn how serviceable the monks of
Canterbury were in preserving the old dead authors of Greece and Rome. We do
not, from the very nature of their lives being so devoted to religion and
piety, expect this; and knowing, too, what “heathen dogs” the monks thought
these authors of idolatry, combined with our notion, that they, far from being
the conservers, were the destroyers, of classic MSS., for the sake, as some
tell us, of the parchment on which they were inscribed, we are somewhat
staggered in our opinion to find in their library the following brilliant array
of the wise men of the ancient world:
· Aristotle,
· Boethius,
· Cicero,
· Cassiodorus,
· Donatus,
· Euclid,
· Galen,
· Justin,
· Josephus,
· Lucan,
· Martial,
· Marcianus,
· Macrobius,
· Orosius,
· Plato,
· Priscian,
· Prosper,
· Prudentius,
· Suetonius,
· Sedulus,
· Seneca,
· Terence,
· Virgil,
· Etc., etc.
Nor were they mere fragments of these authors, but, in
many cases, considerable collections; of Aristotle, for instance, they
possessed numerous works, with many commentaries upon him. Of Seneca a still
more extensive and valuable one; and in the works of the eloquent Tully, they
were also equally rich. Of his Paradoxa, de Senectute,
de Amiticia, etc., and his Offices, they had more copies than one, a proof
of the respect and esteem with which he was regarded. In miscellaneous
literature, and in the productions of the middle age writers, the catalogue
teems with an abundant supply, and includes:
· Rabanus
Maurus,
· Thomas
Aquinas,
· Peter Lombard,
· Athelard,
· William of Malmsbury,
· John of Salisbury,
· Girald Barry,
· Thomas Baldwin,
· Brutus,
· Robert Grosetete,
· Gerlandus,
· Gregory Nazianzen,
· History of England,
· Gesti Alexandri Magni,
· Hystoria Longobardos,
· Hystoriæ Scholasticæ,
· Chronicles Latine et Anglice,
· Chronographia Necephori.
But I trust the reader will not rest satisfied with
these few samples of the goodly store, but inspect the catalogue for himself.
It would occupy, as I said before, too much space to enumerate even a small
proportion of its many treasures, which treat of all branches of literature and
science, natural history, medicine, ethics, philosophy, rhetoric, grammar,
poetry, and music; each shared the studious attention of the monks, and a
curious Liber de Astronomia taught them the rudiments of that
sublime science, but which they were too apt to confound with its offspring,
astrology, as we may infer, was the case with the monks of Canterbury, for
their library contained a Liber de Astrolœbus, and the Prophesies
of Merlin.
Many hints connected with the literary portion of a
monastic life may sometimes be found in these catalogues. It was evidently
usual at Christ Church Monastery to keep apart a number of books for the
private study of the monks in the cloister, which I imagine they were at
liberty to use at any time.
A portion of the catalogue of monk Henry is headed Lib.
de Armariole Claustre, under which it is pleasing to observe a
Bible, in two volumes, specified as for the use of the infirmary, with
devotional books, lives of the fathers, a history of England, the works of
Bede, Isidore, Boethius, Rabanus Maurus, Cassiodorus, and many
others of equal celebrity. In another portion of the manuscript, we find a list
of their church books, written at the same time; it affords a brilliant proof
of the plentitude of the gospels among them; for no less than twenty-five
copies are described. We may judge to what height the art of bookbinding had
arrived by the account here given of these precious volumes. Some were in a
splendid coopertoria of gold and silver, and others exquisitely
ornamented with figures of our Saviour and the four Evangelists. But
this extravagant costliness rendered them attractive objects to pilfering
hands, and somewhat accounts for the lament of the industrious Somner, who
says that the library was “shamefully robbed and spoiled of them all”.
Chiclely. Sellinge. Rochester. Gundulph. Radulphus. Ascelinof
Dover. Glanvill, etc.
Our remarks on the monastic library at Canterbury are
drawing to a close. Henry Chiclely, archbishop in 1413, an excellent man,
and a great promoter of learning, rebuilt the library of the church, and
furnished it with many a choice tome. His esteem for literature was so
great, that he built two colleges at Oxford. William Sellinge, who was a
man of erudition, and deeply imbued with the book-loving mania, was elected
prior in 1472. He is said to have studied at Bonania, in Italy; and,
during his travels, he gathered together “all the ancient authors, both Greek
and Latine, he could get”, and returned laden with them to his own
country. Many of them were of great rarity, and it is said that a Tully de Republica was
among them. Unfortunately, they were all burnt by a fire in the monastery.
I have said enough, I think, to show that books were
eagerly sought after, and deeply appreciated, in Canterbury cloisters during
the middle ages, and when the reader considers that these facts have been
preserved from sheer accident, and, therefore, only enable us to obtain a
partial glimpse of the actual state of their library, he will be ready to admit
that bibliomania existed then, and will feel thankful, too, that it did, for to
its influence, surely, we are indebted for the preservation of much that is
valuable and instructive in history and general literature.
We can scarcely leave Kent without a word or two
respecting the church of the Rochester monks. It was founded by King Ethelbert,
who conferred upon it the dignities of an episcopal see, in the year 600; and,
dedicating it to St. Andrew, completed the good work by many donations and emoluments.
The revenues of the see were always limited, and it is said that its poverty
caused it to be treated with kind forbearance by the ecclesiastical
commissioners at the period of the Reformation.
I have not been able to meet with any catalogue of its
monastic library, and the only hints I can obtain relative to their books are
such as may be gathered from the recorded donations of its learned prelates and
monks. In the year 1077, Gundulph, a Norman bishop, who is justly
celebrated for his architectural talents, rebuilt the cathedral, and
considerable remains of this structure are still to be seen in the nave and
west front, and display that profuse decoration united with ponderous
stability, for which the Norman buildings are so remarkable. This munificent
prelate also enriched the church with numerous and costly ornaments; the
encouragement he gave to learning calls for some notice here. Trained in one of
the most flourishing of the Norman schools, we are not surprised that in his
early youth he was so studious and inquisitive after knowledge as to merit the
special commendation of his biographer. William of Malmsbury, too, highly
extols him “for his abundant piety”, and tells us that he was not inexperienced
in literary avocations; he was polished and courageous in the management of
judicial affairs, and a close, devoted student of the divine writings; as a
scribe he was industrious and critical, and the great purpose to which he
applied his patience and erudition was a careful revisal of the Holy Scriptures.
He purged the sacred volume of the inadvertencies of the scribes, and restored
the purity of the text; for transcribing after transcribing had caused some
errors and diversity of readings to occur, between the English and foreign
codices, in spite of all the pious care of the monastic copyists; this was
perplexing, an uniformity was essential and he undertook the task; labors so
valuable deserve the highest praise, and we bestow it more liberally upon him
for this good work than we should have done had he been the compiler of crude
homilies or the marvelous legends of saints. The high veneration in
which Gundulph held the patristic writings induced him to bestow his
attention in a similar manner upon them, he compared copies, studied their
various readings and set to work to correct them. The books necessary for these
critical researches he obtained from the libraries of his former master, Bishop
Lanfranc, St. Anselm, his schoolfellow, and many others who were studying
at Bec, but besides this, he corrected many other authors, and by
comparing them with ancient manuscripts, restored them to their primitive
beauty. Fabricius notices a fine volume, which bore ample testimony
to his critical erudition and dexterity as a scribe. It is described as a large
Bible on parchment, written in most beautiful characters, it was proved to be
his work by this inscription on its title page, Prima
pars Bibliæ per
bona memoriæ Gundulphum Rossensem Episcopum. This
interesting manuscript, formerly in the library of the monks of Rochester, was
regarded as one of their most precious volumes.
An idea of the great value of a Bible in those times
may be derived from the curious fact that the bishop made a decree directing “excommunication
to be pronounced against whosoever should take away or conceal this volume, or
who should even dare to conceal the inscription on the front, which indicated
the volume to be the property of the church of Rochester”. But we must bear in
mind that this was no ordinary copy, it was transcribed by Gundulph’s own
pen, and rendered pure in its text by his critical labors. But the time came
when anathemas availed nought, and excommunication was divested of all
terror. “Henry the Eighth”, the “Defender of the Faith”,"frowned
destruction upon the monks, and in the tumult that ensued, this treasure was
carried away, anathema and all. Somehow or other it got to Amsterdam, perhaps
sent over in one of those “shippes full”, to the bookbinders, and having
passed through many hands, at last found its way into the possession of Herman
Van de Wal, Burgomaster of Amsterdam; since then it was sold by public
auction, but has now I believe been lost sight of. Among the numerous treasures
which Gundulph gave to his church, he included a copy of the Gospels,
two missals and a book of Epistles. Similar books were given by succeeding
prelates; Radolphus, a Norman bishop in 1108, gave the monks several
copies of the gospels beautifully adorned. Earnulphus, in the year 1115,
was likewise a benefactor in this way; he bestowed upon them, besides many gold
and silver utensils for the church, a copy of the gospels, lessons for the
principal days, a benedictional, or book of blessings, a missal,
handsomely bound, and a capitular. Ascelin, formerly prior of Dover,
and made bishop of Rochester, in the year 1142, gave them a Psalter and the
Epistles of St. Paul, with a gloss. He was a learned man, and excessively fond
of books; a passion which he had acquired no doubt in his monastery of Dover
which possessed a library of no mean extent. He wrote a commentary on Isaiah,
and gave it to the monastery; Walter, archdeacon of Canterbury, who
succeeded Ascelin, gave a copy of the gospels bound in gold, to the
church; and Waleran, elected bishop in the year 1182, presented them with
a glossed Psalter, the Epistles of Paul, and the Sermons of Peter.
Glanvill, bishop in the year 1184, endeavored to
deprive the monks of the land which Gundulph had bestowed upon them;
this gave to rise to many quarrels which the monks never forgave; it is said that
he died without regret, and was buried without ceremony; yet the curious may
still inspect his tomb on the north side of the altar, with his effigies and
mitre lying at length upon it. Glanvill probably repented of his
conduct, and he strove to banish all animosity by many donations; and among
other treasures, he gave the monks the five books of Moses and other volumes.
Osbern of Shepey, who was prior in the year 1189, was
a great scribe and wrote many volumes for the library; he finished the
Commentary of Ascelin, transcribed a history of Peter, a Breviary for the
chapel, a book called De Claustra animæ, and wrote the great
Psalter which is chained to the choir and window of St. Peter's altar. Ralph de
Ross, and Heymer de Tunebregge, also bestowed gifts of a similar
nature upon the monks; but the book anecdotes connected with this monastic
fraternity are remarkably few, barren of interest, and present no very exalted
idea of their learning.
CHAPTER V
Lindesfarne
The Benedictine monastery of Lindesfarne, or the Holy
Island, as it was called, was founded through the instrumentality of Oswald,
the son of Ethelfrith, king of Northumberland, who was anxious for the
promulgation of the Christian faith within his dominions. Aidan, the first
bishop of whom we have any distinct account, was appointed about the year 635.
Bede tells us that he used frequently to retire to the Isle of Farne, that
he might pray in private and be undisturbed. This small island, distant about
nine miles from the church of Lindesfarne, obtained great celebrity from St.
Cuthbert, who sought that quiet spot and led there a lonely existence in great
continence of mind and body. In 685 he was appointed to the see of
Lindesfarne, where, by his pious example and regular life, he instructed many
in their religious duties. The name of this illustrious saint is intimately
connected with a most magnificent specimen of calligraphical art of
the eighth century, preserved in the British Museum, and well known by the name
of the Durham Book, or Saint Cuthbert's Gospels; it was written some years
after the death of that Saint, in honor of his memory, by Egfrith, a monk
of Lindesfarne, who was made bishop of that see in the year 698.
At Egfrith’s death in 721, his successor, Aethilwald, most
beautifully bound it in gold and precious stones, and Bilfrid, a hermit,
richly illuminated it by prefixing to each gospel a beautiful painting
representing one of the Evangelists, and a tesselated cross, executed
in a most elaborate manner. He also displayed great skill by illuminating the
large capital letters at the commencement of each gospel. Doubtless, the
hermit Bilfrid was an eminent artist in his day. Aldred, the
Glossator, a priest of Durham, about the year 950, still more enriched this
precious volume by interlining it with a Saxon Gloss, or version of the Latin
text of St. Jerome, of which the original manuscript is a copy. It is
therefore, one of the most venerable of those early attempts to render the holy
scriptures into the vernacular tongue, and is on that account an interesting
relic to the Christian reader, and, no doubt, formed the choicest volume in the
library of Lindesfarne.
But imperfectly, indeed, have I described the splendid
manuscript which is now lying, in all its charms, before me. And as I mark its
fine old illuminations, so bright in color, and so chaste in execution, the
accuracy of its transcription, and the uniform beauty of its calligraphy, my
imagination carries me back to the quiet cloister of the old Saxon scribe who
wrote it, and I can see in Egfrith, a bibliomaniac, of no mean
pretensions, and in Bilfrid, a monkish illuminator, well initiated in the
mysteries of his art. The manuscript contains 258 double columned folio pages,
and the paintings of the Evangelists each occupy an entire page. We learn the
history of its production from a very long note at the end of the manuscript,
written by the hand of the glossator.
St. Cuthber’'s Gospels.
But sad misfortunes were in store for the holy monks,
for about 793, or a little earlier, when Highbald was abbot, the
Danes burnt down the monastery and murdered the ecclesiastics; “most
dreadful lightnings and other prodigies”, says Simeon of Durham, “are
said to have portended the impending ruin of this place; on the 7th of June
they came to the church of Lindesfarne, miserably plundered all places,
overthrew the altars, and carried away all the treasures of the church, some of
the monks they slew, some they carried away captives, some they drowned in the
sea, and others much afflicted and abused they turned away naked”. Fortunately
some of the poor monks escaped, and after a short time returned to their old
spot, and with religious zeal set about repairing the damage which the sacred
edifice had sustained; after its restoration they continued comparatively quiet
till the time of Eardulfus, when the Danes in the year 875, again invaded
England and burned down the monastery of Lindesfarne. The monks obtained some
knowledge of their coming and managed to effect their escape, taking with them
the body of St. Cuthbert, which they highly venerated, with many other honored
relics; they then set out with the bishop Eardulfus and the
abbot Eadrid at their head on a sort of pilgrimage to discover some
suitable resting place for the remains of their saint; but finding no safe
locality, and becoming fatigued by the irksomeness of the journey, they as a
last resource resolved to pass over to Ireland. For this purpose they proceeded
to the sea, but no sooner were they on board the ship than a terrific storm
arose, and had it not been for the fond care of their patron saint, a watery
grave would have been forever their resting place; but, as it was, their lives
were spared, and the holy bones preserved to bless mankind, and work wondrous
miracles in the old church of the Saxon monks.
Nevertheless, considerable damage was sustained, and
the fury of the angry waves forced them back again to the shore. The monks
deeming this an indication of God’s will that they should remain, decided upon
doing so, and leaving the ship, they agreed to proceed on their way rejoicing,
and place still greater trust in the mercy of God and the miraculous influence
of St. Cuthbert’s holy bones; but some whose reliance on Divine providence
appears not so conspicuous, became dissatisfied, and separated from the rest
till at last only seven monks were left besides their bishop and abbot. Their
relics were too numerous and too cumbersome to be conveyed by so small a
number, and they knew not how to proceed; but one of the seven whose name
was Hanred had a vision, wherein he was told that they should repair
to the sea, where they would find a book of Gospels adorned with gold and
precious stones, which had been lost out of the ship when they were in the
storm; and that after that he should see a bridle hanging on a tree, which he
should take down and put upon a horse that would come to him, which horse he
should put to a cart he would also find, to carry the holy body, which would be
an ease to them.
All these things happening accordingly, they travelled
with more comfort, following the horse, which way soever he should
lead. The book above mentioned was no ways damaged by the water, and is still
preserved in the library at Durham, where it remained till the Reformation,
when it was stript of its jeweled covering, and after passing through
many hands, ultimately came into the possession of Sir Robert Cotton, in whose
collection, as we have said before, it is now preserved in the British Museum.
Alcuin’s Letter on the occasion.
I cannot refrain, even at the risk of incurring some
blame for my digression, presenting the reader with a part of a letter full of
fraternal love, which Alcuin addressed to the monks of Lindesfarne on this sad
occasion.
“Your dearest fraternity”, says he, “was wont to
afford me much joy. But now how different! though absent, I deeply lament the
more your tribulations and calamities; the manner in which the Pagans
contaminate the sanctuaries of God, and shed the blood of saints around the
altar, devastating the joy of our house, and trampling on the bodies of holy
men in the temple of God, as though they were treading on a dunghill in the
street. But of what effect is our wailing unless we come before the altars of
Christ and cry, 'Spare me, O Lord! spare thy people, and take
not thine inheritance from them; nor let the Pagans say, ‘Where is
the God of the Christians?’ Besides who is to pacify the churches of Britain,
if St. Cuthbert cannot defend them with so great a number of saints?
Nevertheless do not trouble the mind about these things, for
God chasteneth all the sons whom he receiveth, and therefore
perhaps afflicts you the more, because he the more loveth you.
Jerusalem, the delightful city of God, was lost by the Chaldean scourge; and
Rome, the city of the holy Apostles and innumerable martyrs, was surrounded by
the Pagans and devastated. Well nigh the whole of Europe is evacuated by the
scourging sword of the Goths or the Huns. But in the same manner in which God
preserved the stars to illuminate the heavens, so will He preserve the churches
to ornament, and in their office to strengthen and increase the Christian
religion.”
Thus it came to pass that Eardulphus was the
last bishop of Lindesfarne and the first of Cunecacestre, or Chester-upon-the-Street,
to which place his see was removed previous to its final settlement at Durham.
After a succession of many bishops, some recorded as
learned and bookish by monkish annalists, and nearly all benefactors in
some way to their church, we arrive at the period when Aldwine was
consecrated bishop of that see in the year 990. The commotions of his time made
his presidency a troubled and harassing one. Sweyn, king of Denmark,
and Olauis, king of Norway, invaded England, and spreading themselves in
bodies over the kingdom, committed many and cruel depredations; a strong body
of these infested the northern coast, and approached the vicinity of
Chester-on-the-Street. This so alarmed Aldwine, that he resolved to quit
his church for the great riches and numerous relics of that holy place were
attractive objects to the plundering propensities of the invaders. Carrying,
therefore, the bones of St. Cuthbert with them for that box of mortal dust was
ever precious in the sight of those old monks and the costly treasures of the
church, not forgetting their books, the monks fled to Ripon, and the see,
which after similar adversities their predecessors one hundred and thirteen
years ago had settled at Chester, was forever removed. It is true three or four
months after, as Symeon of Durham tells us, they attempted to return,
but when they reached a place called Werdelan, “on the east and near unto
Durham”, they could not move the bier on which the body of St. Cuthbert was
carried, although they applied their united strength to effect it. The
superstition, or perhaps simplicity, of the monks instantly interpreted this
into a manifestation of divine interference, and they resolved not to return
again to their old spot. And we are further told that after three days’ fasting
and prayer, the Lord vouchsafed to reveal to them that they should bear the
saintly burden to Durham, a command which they piously and cheerfully obeyed.
Having arrived there, they fixed on a wild and uncultivated site, and making a
simple oratory of wattles for the temporary reception of their relics, they set
zealously to work ”for these old monks well knew what labor was” to cut down
wood, to clear the ground, and build an habitation for themselves. Shortly
after, in the wilderness of that neglected spot, the worthy
bishop Aldwine erected a goodly church of stone to the honor of God,
and as a humble tribute of gratitude and love; and so it was that Aldwine,
the last bishop of Chester-on-the-Street, was the first of Durham.
Removal to Durham.
When William Carelepho, a Norman monk, was
consecrated bishop, the church had so increased in wealth and usefulness, that
fresh wants arose, more space was requisite, and a grander structure would be
preferable; the bishop thereupon pulled the old church of Aldwine down
and commenced the erection of a more magnificent one in its place, as the
beauty of Durham cathedral sufficiently testifies even now; and will not the
lover of artistic beauty award his praise to the Norman bishop, those massive
columns and stupendous arches excite the admiring wonder of all; built on a
rocky eminence and surrounded by all the charms of a romantic scenery, it is
one of the finest specimens of architecture which the enthusiasm of monkish
days dedicated to piety and to God. Its liberal founder however did not live to
see it finished, for he died in the year 1095, two years after laying its
foundation stone. His book-loving propensities have been honorably recorded,
and not only was he fond of reading, but kept the pens of the scribes in
constant motion, and used himself to superintend the transcription of
manuscripts, as the colophon of a folio volume in Durham library fully proves.
The monkish bibliophiles of his church received from him a precious gift of
about 40 volumes, containing among other valuable books Prosper, Pompeii,
Tertullian, and a great Bible in two volumes.
It would have been difficult perhaps to have found in
those days a body of monks so “bookish” as those of Durham; not only did they
transcribe with astonishing rapidity, proving that there was no want of vellum
there, but they must have bought or otherwise collected a great number of
books; for the see of Durham, in the early part of the 12th century,
could show a library embracing nearly 300 volumes.
Nor let the reader imagine that the collection
possessed no merit in a literary point of view, or that the monks cared for
little else save legends of saints or the literature of the church; the
catalogue proves them to have enjoyed a more liberal and a more refined taste,
and again display the cloistered students of the middle ages as the preservers
of classic learning. This is a point worth observing on looking over the old
parchment catalogues of the monks; for as by their Epistles we obtain a
knowledge of their intimacy with the old writers, and the use they made of
them, so by their catalogues we catch a glimpse of the means they possessed of
becoming personally acquainted with their beauties; by the process much light
may be thrown on the gloom of those long past times, and perhaps we shall
gain too a better view of the state of learning existing then. But
that the reader may judge for himself, I extract the names of some of the
writers whom the monks of Durham preserved and read:
· Alcuin.
· Ambrose.
· Aratores.
· Anselm.
· Augustine.
· Aviany.
· Bede.
· Boethius.
· Bernard.
· Cassian.
· Cassiodorus.
· Claudius.
· Cyprian.
· Donatus.
· Esop.
· Eutropius.
· Galen.
· Gregory.
· Haimo.
· Horace.
· Homer.
· Hugo.
· Juvenal.
· Isidore.
· Josephus.
· Lucan.
· Marcianus.
· Maximian.
· Orosius.
· Ovid.
· Prudentius.
· Prosper.
· Persius.
· Priscian.
· Peter Lombard.
· Plato.
· Pompeius
Trogus.
· Quintilian.
· Rabanus.
· Solinus.
· Servius.
· Statius.
· Terence.
· Tully.
· Theodulus.
· Virgil.
· Gesta
Anglorum.
· Gesta
Normanorum.
Hugh de Pussar. Anthony Bek.
Hugh de Pussar, consecrated bishop in 1153, is
the next who attracts our attention by his bibliomanical renown. He
possessed perhaps the finest copy of the Holy Scriptures of any private
collector; and he doubtless regarded his “unam Bibliam in
iv. magnis voluminibus”, with the veneration of a divine and the
fondness of a student. He collected what in those times was deemed a
respectable library, and bequeathed no less than sixty or seventy volumes to
the Durham monks, including his great Bible, which has ever since been
preserved with religious care; from a catalogue of them we learn his partiality
for classical literature; a Tully, Sedulus, Priscian, and Claudius, are
mentioned among them.
Anthony Bek, who was appointed to the see in the
year 1283, was a most ambitious and haughty prelate, and caused great
dissensions in his church. History proves how little he was adapted for the
responsible duties of a bishop, and points to the field of battle or civil pomp
as most congenial to his disposition. He ostentatiously displayed the splendor
of a Palatine Prince, when he contributed his powerful aid to the cause of his
sovereign, in the Scottish war, by a retinue of 500 horse, 1000 foot, 140
knights, and 26 standard bearers, rendered doubly imposing in those days of
saintly worship and credulity, by the patronage of St. Cuthbert, under whole
holy banner they marched against a brave and noble foe. His arbitrary temper
caused sad quarrels in the cloister, which ultimately gave rise to a tedious
law proceeding between him and the prior about the year 1300; from a record of
this affair we learn that the bishop had borrowed some books from the library
which afterwards he refused to return; there was among them a Decretal, a
history of England, a Missal, and a volume called “The book of St. Cuthbert, in
which the secrets of the monastery are written”, which was alone valued at £200,
probably in consideration of the important and delicate matters contained
therein.
These proceedings were instituted by prior Hoton,
who was fond of books, and had a great esteem for learning; he founded a
college at Oxford for the monkish students of his church. On more than one
occasion he sent parcels of books to Oxford; in a list of an early date it
appears that the monks of Durham sent at one time twenty volumes, and shortly
after fifteen more, consisting principally of church books and lives of saints.
The numbers thus taken from their library the monks, with that love of learning
for which they were so remarkable, anxiously replaced, by purchasing about
twenty volumes, many of which contained a great number of small but choice
pieces.
Robert de Graystane, a monk of Durham, was
elected bishop by the prior and chapter, and confirmed on the 10th of November,
1333, but the king, Edward III, wishing to advance his treasurer to that see,
refused his sanction to the proceeding; monk Robert was accordingly deposed,
and Richard Angraville received the mitre in his stead. He was
consecrated on the 19th of December in the same year, by John Stratford,
archbishop of Canterbury, and installed by proxy on the 10th of January, 1334.
Richard de Bury and his Philobiblon, etc.
Angraville, Aungerville, or as he is more commonly
called Richard de Bury, is a name which every bibliophile will honor and
esteem; he was indeed a bibliomaniac of the first order, and a sketch of his
life is not only indispensable here, but cannot fail to interest the book-loving
reader. But before entering more at large into his bookish propensities and
talents, it will be necessary to say something of his early days and the
illustrious career which attended his political and ecclesiastical life.
Richard de Bury, the son of Sir Richard Angraville, was born, as his
name implies, at Bury St. Edmunds, in Suffolk, in the year 1287.
Great attention was paid to the instruction of his
youthful mind by his maternal uncle, John de Willowby, a priest, previous
to his removal to Oxford. At the university he obtained honorable distinction,
as much for his erudition and love of books as for the moral rectitude of his
behavior. These pleasing traits were the stepping stones to his future
greatness, and on the strength of them he was selected as one fully competent
to undertake the education of Edward Prince of Wales, afterwards the third king
of that name; and to Richard de Bury “may be traced the love for literature and
the arts displayed by his pupil when on the throne. He was rewarded with the lucrative
appointment of treasurer of Gascony”.
When Edward, the prince of Wales, was sent to Paris to
assume the dominion of Guienne, which the king had resigned in his favor, he
was accompanied by queen Isabella, his mother, whose criminal frailty, and afterwards
conspiracy, with Mortimer, aroused the just indignation of her royal husband;
and commenced those civil dissensions which rendered the reign of Edward II so
disastrous and turbulent. It was during these commotions that Richard de Bury
became a zealous partisan of the queen, to whom he fled, and ventured to supply
her pecuniary necessities from the royal revenues; for this, however, he was
surrounded with imminent danger; for the king, instituting an inquiry into
these proceedings, attempted his capture, which he narrowly escaped by
secreting himself in the belfry of the convent of Brothers Minor at Paris.
When the “most invincible and most magnificent king”
Edward III was firmly seated upon the throne, dignity and power was lavishly
bestowed on this early bibliomaniac. In an almost incredible space of time he
was appointed cofferer to the king, treasurer of the wardrobe,
archdeacon of Northampton, prebendary of Lincoln, Sarum,
Litchfield, and shortly afterwards keeper of the privy seal, which office he
held for five years. During this time he twice undertook a visit to Italy, on a
mission to the supreme pontiff, John XXII, who not only entertained him with
honor and distinction, but appointed him chaplain to his principal chapel, and
gave him a bull, nominating him to the first vacant see in England.
He acquired whilst there an honor which reflected more
credit than even the smiles of his holiness --the brightest of the Italian
poets, Petrarch of never dying fame-- bestowed upon him his acquaintance and
lasting friendship. De Bury entered Avignon for the first time in the same year
that Petrarch took up his residence there, in the house of Colonna, bishop
of Lombes: two such enlightened scholars and indefatigable book
collectors, sojourning in the same city, soon formed an intimacy. How
interesting must their friendly meetings have been, and how delightful the
hours spent in Petrarch's library, which was one of great extent and rarity;
and it is probable too that De Bury obtained from the poet a few treasures to
enrich his own stores; for the generosity of Petrarch was so excessive, that he
could scarcely withhold what he knew was so dearly coveted. His benevolence on
one occasion deprived him and posterity of an inestimable volume; he lent some
manuscripts of the classics to his old master, who, needing pecuniary aid,
pawned them, and Cicero’s books, De Gloria, were in this manner irrecoverably
lost. Petrarch acted like a true lover of learning; for when the
shadows of old age approached, he presented his library, full of rare and
ancient manuscripts, many of them enriched by his own notes, to the Venetian
Senate, and thus laid the foundation of the library of Saint-Marc; he always
employed a number of transcribers, who invariably accompanied him on his journeys,
and he kept horses to carry his books. His love of reading was intense. “Whether”,
he writes in one of his epistles, “I am being shaved, or having my hair cut,
whether I am riding on horseback or taking my meals, I either read myself or
get someone to read to me; on the table where I dine, and by the side of my
bed, I have all the materials for writing”. With the friendship of such a
student, how charming must have been the visit of the English ambassador, and
how much valuable and interesting information must he have gleaned by his
intercourse with Petrarch and his books. At Rome Richard de Bury obtained many
choice volumes and rare old manuscripts of the classics; for at Rome indeed, at
that time, books had become an important article of commerce, and many foreign
collectors besides the English bibliomaniac resorted there for these treasures:
to such an extend was this carried on, that the jealousy of Petrarch was
aroused, who, in addressing the Romans, exclaims: “Are you not ashamed that the
wrecks of your ancient grandeur, spared by the inundation of the barbarians,
are daily sold by your miscalculating avarice to foreigners? And that Rome is
nowhere less known and less loved than at Rome?”
The immense ecclesiastical and civil revenues
which Aungraville enjoyed, enabled him whilst in Italy to maintain a
most costly and sumptuous establishment: in his last visit alone he is said to
have expended 5,000 marks, and he never appeared in public without a numerous
retinue of twenty clerks and thirty-six esquires; an appearance which better
became the dignity of his civil office, than the Christian humility of his
ecclesiastical functions. On his return from this distinguished sojourn, he was
appointed, as we have said before, through the instrumentality of Edward III,
to the bishopric of Durham. But not content with these high preferments,
his royal master advanced him to still greater honor, and on the 28th of
September, 1334, he was made Lord Chancellor of England, which office he filled
till the 5th of June, 1335, when he exchanged it for that of high treasurer. He
was twice appointed ambassador to the king of France, respecting the claims of
Edward of England to the crown of that country. De Bury, whilst
negotiating this affair, visited Antwerp and Brabant for the furtherance of the
object of his mission, and he fully embraced this rare opportunity of adding to
his literary stores, and returned to his fatherland well laden with many choice
and costly manuscripts; for in all his perilous missions he carried about with
him, as he tells us, that love of books which many waters could not extinguish,
but which greatly sweetened the bitterness of peregrination. Whilst at Paris he
was especially assiduous in collecting, and he relates with intense rapture,
how many choice libraries he found there full of all kinds of books, which
tempted him to spend his money freely; and with a gladsome heart he gave his
dirty lucre for treasures so inestimable to the bibliomaniac.
Before the commencement of the war which arose from
the disputed claims of Edward, Richard de Bury returned to enjoy in sweet
seclusion his bibliomanical propensities. The modern bibliophiles who
know what it is to revel in the enjoyment of a goodly library, luxuriant in
costly bindings and rich in bibliographical rarities, who are fully susceptible
to the delights and exquisite sensibilities of that sweet madness called
bibliomania, will readily comprehend the multiplied pleasures of that early and
illustrious bibliophile in the seclusion of Auckland Palace; he there ardently
applied his energies and wealth to the accumulation of books; and whilst
engaged in this pleasing avocation, let us endeavor to catch a glimpse of
him. Chambre, to whom we are indebted for many of the above particulars,
tells us that Richard de Bury was learned in the governing of his house,
hospitable to strangers, of great charity, and fond of disputation with the
learned, but he principally delighted in a multitude of books, Iste summe delectabatur multitudine librorum,
and possessed more books than all the bishops put together, an assertion which
requires some modification, and must not be too strictly regarded, for book
collecting at that time was becoming a favorite pursuit; still the language
of Chambre is expressive, and clearly proves how extensive must have
been his libraries, one of which he formed in each of his various
palaces, diversis maneriis. So engrossed was that worthy
bishop with the passion of book collecting, that his dormitory was strewed with
them, in every nook and corner choice volumes were scattered, so that it was
almost impossible for any person to enter without placing his feet upon some
book. He kept in regular employment no small assemblage of antiquaries,
scribes, bookbinders, correctors, illuminators, and all such persons who were
capable of being useful in the service of books, librorum servitiis utiliter.
During his retirement he wrote a book, from the
perusal of which the bibliomaniac will obtain a full measure of delight and
instruction. It is a faithful record of the life and experience of this
bibliophile of the olden time. He tells us how he collected his vellum
treasures--his “crackling tomes” so rich in illuminations and calligraphic art!--how
he preserved them, and how he would have others read them. Costly indeed must
have been the book gems he amassed together; for foreign countries, as well as
the scribes at home, yielded ample means to augment his stores, and were
incessantly employed in searching for rarities which his heart yearned to possess.
He completed his Philobiblon at his palace at Auckland on the 24th of
January, 1344.
We learn from the prologue to this rare and charming
little volume how true and genuine a bibliomaniac was Richard de Bury, for
he tells us there, that a vehement love of books had so powerfully seized all
the faculties of his mind, that dismissing all other avocations, he had applied
the ardor of his thoughts to the acquisition of books. Expense to him was quite
an afterthought, and he begrudged no amount to possess a volume of rarity or
antiquity. Wisdom, he says, is an infinite treasure, the value of which, in his
opinion, was beyond all things; for how, he asks, can the sum be too great
which purchases such vast delight. We cannot admire the purity of his Latin so much
as the enthusiasm which pervades it; but in the eyes of the bibliophile this
will amply compensate for his minor imperfections. When expatiating on the
value of his books he appears to unbosom, as it were, all the inward
rapture of love. A very helluo librorum--a
very Maliabechi of a collector, yet he encouraged no selfish feeling
to alloy his pleasure or to mingle bitterness with the sweets of his avocation.
His knowledge he freely imparted to others, and his books he gladly lent. This
is apparent in the Philobiblon; and his generous spirit warms his
diction--not always chaste--into a fluent eloquence. His composition overflows
with figurative expressions, yet the rude, ungainly form on which they are
molded deprive them of all claim to elegance or chastity; but while the
homeliness of his diction fails to impress us with an idea of his versatility
as a writer, his chatty anecdotal style rivets and keeps the mind amused, so
that we rise from the little book with the consciousness of having obtained much
profit and satisfaction from its perusal. Nor is it only the bibliomaniac who
may hope to taste this pleasure in devouring the sweet contents of the Philobiblon;
for there are many hints, many wise sayings, and many singular ideas scattered
over its pages, which will amuse or instruct the general reader and the lover
of olden literature. We observe too that Richard de Bury, as a writer, was
far in advance of his age, and his work manifests an unusual freedom and
independence of mind in its author; for although living in monkish days, when
the ecclesiastics were almost supreme in power and wealth, he was fully
sensible of the vile corruptions and abominations which were spreading about
that time so fearfully among some of the cloistered devotees--the spotless
purity of the primitive times was scarce known then--and the dark periods of
the middle ages were bright and holy, when compared with the looseness and
carnality of those turbulent days. Richard de Bury dipped his pen in gall when
he spoke of these sad things, and doubtless many a reveling monk winced under
the lashing words he applied to them; not only does he upbraid them for their
carelessness in religion, but severely reprimands their inattention to
literature and learning. “The monks”, he says, “in the present day seem to be
occupied in emptying cups, not in correcting codices, Calicibus epotandis,
non codicibus emendandis, which they mingle with the lascivious
music of Timotheus, and emulate his immodest manners, so that the sportive
song cantus ludentis, and not the plaintive hymn, proceeds
from the cells of the monks. Flocks and fleeces, grain and granaries, gardens
and olives, potions and goblets, are in this day lessons and studies of the
monks, except some chosen few”. He speaks in equally harsh terms of the
religious mendicants. He accuses them of forgetting the words and admonitions
of their holy founder, who was a great lover of books. He wishes them to
imitate the ancient members of that fraternity, who were poor in spirit, but
most rich in faith. But it must be remembered, that about this time the
mendicant friars were treated with undeserved contempt, and much ill feeling
rose against them among the clergy, but the clergy were somewhat prejudiced in
their judgment. The order of St. Dominic, which a century before gloried in the
approbation of the pope, and in the enjoyment of his potential bulls, now
winced under gloomy and foreboding frowns. The sovereign Pontiff Honorius III
gratefully embraced the service of these friars, and confirmed their order with
important privileges. His successor, Gregory IX, ratified these favors to gain
their useful aid in propping up the papal power, and commanded the ecclesiastics
by a bull to receive these “well-beloved children and preaching friars” of his,
with hospitality and respect. Thus established, they were able to bear
the tossings to and fro which succeeding years produced; but in
Richard de Bury’s time darker clouds were gathering--great men had severely
chastised them with their pens and denounced them in their preachings.
Soon after a host of others sprang up--among the most remarkable of whom were
Johannes Poliaco, and Fitzralph, Archbishop of Armagh, who was a
dear friend and chaplain of Richard de Bury’s and many learned disputations
were carried on between them. The celebrated oration of Fitzralph’s, cited
in the presence of the pope, was a powerful blow to the mendicant friars--an
examination of the matter has rather perplexed than cleared the subject, and I
find it difficult which side to favor, the clergy seem to denounce the begging
friars more from envy and interested motives, for they looked with extreme
jealousy at the encroachments they had made upon their ecclesiastical functions
of confession, absolution, etc., so profitable to the church in those days. In
these matters the church had hitherto reserved a sole monopoly, and the clergy
now determined to protect it with all the powers of oratorial denunciation;
but, looking beyond this veil of prejudice, I am prone to regard them
favorably, for their intense love of books, which they sought for and bought up
with passionate eagerness. Fitzralph, quite unintentionally, bestows a
bright compliment upon them, and as it bears upon our subject and illustrates
the learning of the time, I am tempted to give a few extracts; he sorely
laments the decrease of the number of students in the university of Oxford; “So”,
says he, “that yet in my tyme, in the universitie of Oxenford,
were thirty thousand Scolers at ones; and now beth unnethe sixe thousand”.
All the blame of this he lays to the friars, and accuses them of doing “more grete damage
to learning”. “For these orders of beggers,
for endeless wynnynges that thei geteth by beggyng of
the forseide pryvyleges of schriftes and sepultures
and othere, thei beth now
so multiplyed in conventes and in persons. That many
men tellith that in general studies unnethe, is
it founde to sillynge a profitable book of
ye faculte of art, of dyvynyte, of lawe canon,
of phisik, other of lawe civil,
but alle bookes beth y-bougt of Freres, so that
en ech convent of Freres is a noble librarye and
a grete, and so that ene rech Frere that hath state
in scole, siche as thei beth nowe, hath an hughe librarye.
And also y-sent of
my Sugettes to scole thre other foure persons,
and hit is said me that some of them beth come
home azen for thei myst nougt finde to selle ovn goode Bible; nother othere couenable books”.
This strange accusation proves how industriously the friars collected books,
and we cannot help regarding them with much esteem for doing so. Richard de
Bury fully admits his obligations to the mendicants, from whom he obtained many
choice transcripts. “When indeed”, says he, “we happened to turn aside to the
towns and places where the aforesaid paupers had convents, we were not slack in
visiting their chests and other repositories of books, for there, amidst the
deepest poverty, we found the most exalted riches treasured up; there, in their satchells and
baskets, we discovered not only the crumbs that fell from the master’s table
for the little dogs, but indeed the show bread without leaven, the bread of
angels, containing in itself all that is delectable”; and moreover, he says,
that he found these friars “not selfish hoarders, but meet professors of
enlightened knowledge”.
In the seventh chapter of his work, he deplores the
sad destruction of books by war and fire, and laments the loss of the 700,000
volumes, which happened in the Alexandrian expedition; but the eighth chapter
is the one which the bibliomaniac will regard with the greatest interest, for
Richard de Bury tells us there how he collected together his rich and ample
library. “For although”, he writes, “from our youth we have ever been delighted
to hold special and social communion with literary men and lovers of books, yet
prosperity attending us, having obtained the notice of his majesty the king,
and being received into his own family, we acquired a most ample facility of
visiting at pleasure and of hunting, as it were, some of the most delightful
covers, the public and private libraries, both of the regulars and seculars.
Indeed, while we performed the duties of Chancellor and Treasurer of the most
invincible and ever magnificently triumphant king of England, Edward III, of
that name after the conquest, whose days may the Most High long and tranquilly
deign to preserve. After first inquiring into the things that concerned his
court, and then the public affairs of his kingdom, an easy opening was afforded
us, under the countenance of royal favor, for freely searching the hiding
places of books. For the flying fame of our love had already spread in all
directions, and it was reported not only that we had a longing desire for books,
and especially for old ones, but that anyone could more easily obtain our
favors by quartos than by money. Wherefore, when supported by the bounty of the
aforesaid prince of worthy memory, we were enabled to oppose or advance, to
appoint or discharge; crazy quartos and tottering folios, precious however in
our sight as well as in our affections, flowed in most rapidly from the great
and the small, instead of new year's gift and remunerations, and instead of
presents and jewels. Then the cabinets of the most noble monasteries were
opened, cases were unlocked, caskets were unclasped and sleeping volumes which
had slumbered for long ages in their sepulchers were roused up, and those that
lay hid in dark places were overwhelmed with the rays of a new light. Books
heretofore most delicate now become corrupted and abominable, lay lifeless,
covered indeed with the excrements of mice and pierced through with the gnawing
of worms; and those that were formerly clothed with purple and fine linen were
now seen reposing in dust and ashes, given over to oblivion and the abode of
moths. Amongst these, nevertheless, as time served, we sat down more
voluptuously than the delicate physician could do amidst his stores of
aromatics, and where we found an object of love, we found also an assuagement.
Thus the sacred vessel of science came into the power of our disposal, some
being given, some sold, and not a few lent for a time. Without doubt many who
perceived us to be contented with gifts of this kind, studied to contribute these
things freely to our use, which they could most conveniently do without
themselves. We took care, however, to conduct the business of such so
favorably, that the profit might accrue to them; justice suffered therefore no
detriment”. Of this, however, a doubt will intrude itself upon our minds, in
defiance of the affirmation of my Lord Chancellor; indeed, the paragraph
altogether is unfavorable to the character of so great a man, and fully proves
the laxity of opinion, in those days of monkish supremacy, on judicial matters;
but we must be generous, and allow something for the corrupt usages of the age,
but I cannot omit a circumstance clearly illustrative of this point, which
occurred between the bibliomanical Chancellor and the abbot of St. Alban’s,
the affair is recorded in the chronicle of the abbey, and transpired during the
time Richard de Bury held the privy seal; in that office he appears to have
favored the monks of the abbey in their disputes with the townspeople of St.
Alban's respecting some possessions to which the monks tenaciously adhered and
defended as their rightful property. Richard de Wallingford, who was then
abbot, convoked the elder monks, and discussed with them, as to the most
effectual way to obtain the goodwill and favor of de Bury; after due
consideration it was decided that no gift was likely to prove so acceptable to
that father of English bibliomania as a present of some of their choice books,
and it was at last agreed to send four volumes, “that is to say Terence, a
Virgil, a Quintilian, and Jerome against Ruffinus”, and to sell him many
others from their library; this they sent him intimation of, and a purchase was
ultimately agreed upon between them. The monks sold to that rare collector,
thirty-two choice tomes triginta duos libros, for the sum
of fifty pounds of silver. But there were other bibliophiles and bookworms than
Richard de Bury in old England then; for many of the brothers of St. Alban's
who had nothing to do with this transaction, cried out loudly against it, and
denounced rather openly the policy of sacrificing their mental treasures for
the acquisition of pecuniary gain, but fortunately the loss was only a
temporary one, for on the death of Richard de Bury many of these volumes were
restored to the monks, who in return became the purchasers from his executors
of many a rare old volume from the bishop’s library.
To resume our extracts from the Philobiblon,
De Bury proceeds to further particulars relative to his book-collecting career,
and becomes quite eloquent in detailing these circumstances; but from the
eighth chapter we shall content ourselves with one more paragraph. “Moreover”,
says he, “if we could have amassed cups of gold and silver, excellent horses,
or no mean sums of money, we could in those days have laid up abundance of
wealth for ourselves. But we regarded books not pounds, and valued codices more
than florens, and preferred paltry pamphlets to pampered palfreys. In
addition to this we were charged with frequent embassies of the said prince of
everlasting memory, and owing to the multiplicity of state affairs, we were
sent first to the Roman chair, then to the court of France, then to the various
other kingdoms of the world, on tedious embassies and in perilous times,
carrying about with us that fondness for books, which many waters could not
extinguish”.
The booksellers found Richard de Bury a generous and
profitable customer, and those residing abroad received commissions constantly
from him. “Besides the opportunities”, he writes, “already touched upon, we
easily acquired the notice of the stationers and librarians, not only within
the provinces of our native soil, but of those dispersed over the kingdoms of
France, Germany, and Italy.”
Such was bibliomania five hundred years ago! and does
not the reader behold in it the very type and personification of its existence
now? does he not see in Richard de Bury the prototype of a much honored and
agreeable bibliophile of our own time? Nor has the renowned “Maister Dibdin”
described his book-hunting tours with more enthusiasm or delight; with what a
thrill of rapture would that worthy doctor have explored those monastic
treasures which De Bury found hid in dark places, locis tenebrosis,
antique Bibles, rare Fathers, rich Classics or gems of monkish lore, enough to
fire the brain of the most lymphatic bibliophile, were within the grasp of the
industrious and eager Richard de Bury, that old “Amator Librorum”, like
his imitators of the present day, cared not whither he went to collect his
books, dust and dirt were no barriers to him; at every nook and corner where a
stationer's stall appeared, he would doubtless tarry in defiance of the cold
winds or scorching sun, exploring the ancient tomes reposing there. Nor did he
neglect the houses of the country rectors; and even the humble habitations of
the rustics were diligently ransacked to increase his collections, and from
these sources he gleaned many rude but pleasing volumes, perhaps full of old
popular poetry! or the wild Romances of Chivalry which enlivened the halls and
cots of our forefathers in Gothic days.
We must not overlook the fact that this Treatise on
the Love of Books was written as an accompaniment to a noble and generous gift.
Many of the parchment volumes which De Bury had collected in his “perilous
embassies”, he gave, with the spirit of a true lover of learning, to
the Durham College at Oxford, for the use of the Students of his Church. I
cannot but regret that the names of these books, of which he had made a
catalogue, have not been preserved; perhaps the document may yet be discovered
among the vast collections of manuscripts in the Oxonian libraries;
but the book, being written for this purpose, the author thought it consistent
that full directions should be given for the preservation and regulation of the
library, and we find the last chapter devoted to this matter; but we must not
close the Philobiblon without noticing his admonitions to the
students, some of whom he upbraids for the carelessness and disrespect which
they manifest in perusing books. “Let there”, says he, with all the veneration
of a passionate booklover, “be a modest decorum in opening and closing of
volumes, that they may neither be unclasped with precipitous haste, nor thrown
aside after inspection without being duly closed”. Loving and venerating a book
as De Bury did, it was agony to see a volume suffering under the indignities of
the ignorant or thoughtless student whom he thus keenly satirizes: “You will
perhaps see a stiff-necked youth lounging sluggishly in his study, while the
frost pinches him in winter time; oppressed with cold his watery nose drops,
nor does he take the trouble to wipe it with his handkerchief till it has
moistened the book beneath it with its vile dew”; nor is he “ashamed to eat
fruit and cheese over an open book, or to transfer his empty cup from side to
side; he reclines his elbow on the volume, turns down the leaves, and puts bits
of straw to denote the place he is reading; he stuffs the book with leaves and
flowers, and so pollutes it with filth and dust”. With this our extracts from
the Philobiblon must close; enough has been said and transcribed to
place the Lord Chancellor of the puissant King Edward III among the foremost of
the bibliomaniacs of the past, and to show how valuable were his efforts to
literature and learning; indeed, like Petrarch in Italy was Richard De Bury in
England: both enthusiastic collectors and preservers of ancient manuscripts,
and both pioneers of that revival of European literature which soon afterwards
followed. In the fourteenth century we cannot imagine a more useful or more
essential person than the bibliomaniac, for that surely was the harvest day for
the gathering in of that food on which the mind of future generations were to
subsist. And who reaped so laboriously or gleaned so carefully as those two
illustrious scholars?
Richard de Bury was no unsocial bookworm; for whilst
he loved to seek the intercourse of the learned dead, he was far from being
regardless of the living. Next to his clasped vellum tomes, nothing afforded
him so much delight as an erudite disputation with his chaplains, who were
mostly men of acknowledged learning and talent; among them were “Thomas Bradwardyn,
afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury; and Richard Fitz-Raufe, afterwards
Archbishop of Armagh; Walter Burley, John Maudyt,
Robert Holcote, Richard of Kilwington, all Doctors in Theology, omnes Doctores in Theologia;
Richard Benworth, afterwards Bishop of London, and Walter Segraffe,
afterwards Bishop of Chester”; with these congenial spirits Richard de Bury
held long and pleasing conversations, doubtless full of old book wisdom and
quaint Gothic lore, derived from still quainter volumes; and after meals I dare
say they discussed the choice volume which had been read during their repast,
as was the pious custom of those old days, and which was not neglected by
De Bury, for “his manner was at dinner and supper time to have some
good booke read unto him.”
And now in bidding farewell to the
illustrious Aungraville--for little more is known of his biography--let me
not forget to pay a passing tribute of respect to his private character, which
is right worthy of a cherished remembrance, and derives its
principal lustre from the eminent degree in which he was endowed with
the greatest of Christian virtues, and which, when practiced with
sincerity, covereth a multitude of sins; his charity, indeed, forms a
delightful trait in the character of that great man; every week he distributed
food to the poor; eight quarters of wheat octo quarteria frumenti,
and the fragments from his own table comforted the indigent of his church; and
always when he journeyed from Newcastle to Durham, he distributed twelve marks
in relieving the distresses of the poor; from Durham to Stockton eight marks;
and from the same place to his palace at Aukeland five marks; and when
he rode from Durham to Middleham he gave away one hundred shillings.
Living in troublous times, we do not find his name coupled with any great
achievement in the political sphere; his talents were not the most propitious
for a statesman among the fierce barons of the fourteenth century; his spirit
loved converse with the departed great, and shone more to advantage in the
quite closet of the bibliomaniac, or in fulfilling the benevolent duties of a
bishop. Yet he was successful in all that the ambition of a statesman could
desire, the friend and confidant of his king; holding the highest offices in
the state compatible with his ecclesiastical position, with wealth in
abundance, and blessed with the friendship of the learned and the good, we find
little in his earthly career to darken the current of his existence, or to
disturb the last hours of a life of near three score years. He died lamented,
honored, and esteemed, at Aukeland palace, on the fourteenth of
April, in the year 1345, in the fifty-eighth year of his age, and was buried
with all due solemnity before the altar of the blessed Mary Magdalene, at the
south angle of the church of Durham. His bones are now mingled with the dust
and gone, but his memory is engraven on tablets of life; the hearts
of all bibliomaniacs love and esteem his name for the many virtues with which
it was adorned, and delight to chat with his choice old spirit in
the Philobiblon, so congenial to their bookish souls. No doubt the
illustrious example of Richard de Bury tended materially to spread far and wide
the spirit of bibliomania. It certainly operated powerfully on the monks of
Durham, who not only by transcribing, but at the cost of considerable sums of
money, greatly increased their library. A catalogue of the collection, taken
some forty years after the death of De Bury, is preserved to this day at
Durham, and shows how considerably they augmented it during a space of two
hundred years, or from the time when the former list was written. If the
bibliomaniac can obtain a sight of this ancient catalogue, he will dwell over
it with astonishment and delight--immaculate volumes of Scripture--fathers and
classics bespeak its richness and extent, and Robert of Lanchester, the
librarian who wrote it, with pious preference places first on the list the
magnificent Bible which bishop Hugo gave them many years before. This rare
biblical treasure, then the pride and glory of the collection, is now in the
Durham Library; but to look upon that fair manuscript will make the blood run
cold-barbarous desecration has been committed by
some bibliopegistical hand; the splendid illuminations so rich and
spirited, which adorned the beauteous tomes, dazzled an ignorant mind, who cut
them out and robbed it of half its interest and value.
From near 600 volumes which the list enumerates, I
cannot refrain from naming two or three. I have searched over its biblical
department in vain to discover mention of the celebrated Saint Cuthbert’s Gospels.
It is surprising they should have forgotten so rich a gem, for although four
copies of the Gospels appear, not one of them answers to its description; two
are specified as “non glos”; it could not have been either of those,
another, the most interesting of the whole, is recorded as the venerable Bede's
own copy! What bibliophile can look unmoved upon those time-honored pages,
without indeed all the warmth of his booklove kindling forth into a
very frenzy of rapture and veneration! So fairly written, and so accurately
transcribed, it is one of the most precious of the many gems which now crowd
the shelves of the Durham Library, and is well worth a pilgrimage to view it.
But this cannot be St. Cuthbert's Gospels, and the remaining copy is mentioned
as Quarteur Evangelum, fol. ii. “se levantem”; now I have
looked at the splendid volume in the British Museum, to see if the catchword
answered to this description, but it does not; so it cannot be this, which I
might have imagined without the trouble of a research, for if it was, they
surely would not have forgotten to mention its celebrated coopertoria.
Passing a splendid array of Scriptures whole and in
parts, for there was no paucity of sacred volumes in that old monkish library,
and fathers, doctors of the Church, schoolmen, lives of saints, chronicles,
profane writers, philosophical and logical treatises, medical works, grammars,
and books of devotion, we are particularly struck with the appearance of so
many fine classical authors. Works of Virgil (including the Aeneid), Pompeius Trogus,
Claudius, Juvenal, Terence, Ovid, Prudentius, Quintilian, Cicero, Boethius,
and a host of others are in abundance, and form a catalogue rendered doubly
exciting to the bibliophile by the insertion of an occasional note, which tells
of its antiquity, rarity, or value. In some of the volumes a curious
inscription was inserted, thundering a curse upon any who would dare to pilfer
it from the library, and for so sacrilegious a crime, calling down upon them the
maledictions of Saints Maria, Oswald, Cuthbert, and Benedict. A volume
containing the lives of St. Cuthbert, St. Oswald, and St. Aydani, is
described as “Liber speciales et preciosus cum signaculo deaurato.”
Thomas Langley, who was chancellor of England and
bishop of Durham in the year 1406, collected many choice books, and left some
of them to the library of Durham church; among them a copy of Lyra’s Commentaries
stands conspicuous; he also bequeathed a number of volumes to many of his
private friends.
There are few monastic libraries whose progress we can
trace with so much satisfaction as the one now under consideration, for we have
another catalogue compiled during the librarianship of John Tyshbourne, in
the year 1416, in which many errors appearing in the former ones are carefully
corrected; books which subsequent to that time had been lost or stolen are here
accounted for; many had been sent to the students at Oxford, and others have
notes appended, implying to whom the volume had been lent; thus to a Flores Bernardi,
occurs “Prior debit, I Kempe Episcopi Londoni”. It is,
next to Monk Henry’s of Canterbury, one of the best of all the monkish
catalogues I have seen; not so much for its extent, as that here and there it
fully partakes of the character of a catalogue raisonné; for terse
sentences are affixed to some of the more remarkable volumes, briefly
descriptive of their value; a circumstance seldom observable in these early
attempts at bibliography.
In taking leave of Durham library, need I say that the
bibliomaniacs who flourished there in the olden time, not only collected their
books with so much industry, but knew well how to use them too. The reader is
doubtless aware how many learned men dwelled in monkish time within those
ancient walls; and if he is inquisitive about such things has often enjoyed a
few hours of pleasant chat over the historic pages of Symeon of
Durham, Turgot and Wessington, and has often heard of brothers Lawrence,
Reginald, and Bolton; but although unheeded now, many a monkish bookworm,
glorying in the strict observance of Christian humility, and so unknown to
fame, lies buried beneath that splendid edifice, as many monuments and funeral
tablets testify and speak in high favor of the great men of Durham. If the
reader should perchance to wander near that place, his eye will be attracted by
many of these memorials of the dead; and a few hours spent in exploring them
will serve to gain many additional facts to his antiquarian lore, and perhaps
even something better too. For I know not a more suitable place, as far as
outward circumstances are concerned, than an old sanctuary of God to prepare
the mind and lead it to think of death and immortality. We read the names of
great men long gone; of wealthy worldlings, whose fortunes have long been
spent; of ambitious statesmen and doughty warriors, whose glory is fast fading
as their costly mausoleums crumble in the hands of time, and whose stone
tablets, green with the lichens’ hue, manifest how futile it is to hope to gain
immortality from stone, or purchase fame by the cold marble trophies of pompous
grief; not that on their glassy surface the truth is always faithfully mirrored
forth, even when the thoughts of holy men composed the eulogy; the tombs of old
knew as well how to lie as now, and even ascetic monks could become too warm in
their praises of departed worth; for whilst they blamed the great man living,
with Christian charity they thought only of his virtues when they had nothing
but his body left, and murmured long prayers, said tedious masses, and kept
midnight vigils for his soul. For had he not shown his love to God by his
munificence to His Church on earth? Benedicite, saith the monks.
CHAPTER VI
Croyland Monastery
The low marshy fens of Lincolnshire are particularly
rich in monastic remains; but none prove so attractive to the antiquary as the
ruins of the splendid abbey of Croyland. The pen of Ingulphus has made the
affairs of that old monastery familiar to us; he has told us of its prospering
and its misfortunes, and we may learn moreover from the pages of the monk how
many wise and virtuous men, of Saxon and Norman days, were connected with this
ancient fabric, receiving education there, or devoting their lives to piety
within its walls. It was here that Guthlac, a Saxon warrior, disgusted with the
world, sought solitude and repose; and for ten long years he led a hermit's
life in that damp and marshy fen; in prayer and fasting, working miracles, and
leading hearts to God, he spent his lonely days, all which was rewarded by a
happy and peaceful death, and a sanctifying of his corporeal remains—for many
wondrous miracles were wrought by those holy relics.
Croyland abbey was founded on the site of Guthlac’s
hermitage, by Ethelred, king of Mercia. Many years before, when he was striving
for the crown of that kingdom, his cousin, Crobrid, who then enjoyed it,
pursued him with unremitting enmity; and worn out, spiritless and exhausted,
the royal wanderer sought refuge in the hermit's cell. The holy man comforted
him with every assurance of success; and prophesied that he would soon obtain
his rights without battle or without bloodshed; in return for these brighter
prospects, and these kind wishes, Ethelred promised to found a monastery on
that very spot in honor of God and St. Guthlac, which promise he faithfully
fulfilled in the year 716, and “thus the wooden oratory was followed by a
church of stone”. Succeeding benefactors endowed, and succeeding abbots
enriched it with their learning; and as years rolled by so it grew and flourished
till it became great in wealth and powerful in its influence. But a gloomy day
approached—the Danes destroyed that noble structure, devastating it by fire,
and besmearing its holy altars with the blood of its hapless inmates. But
zealous piety and monkish perseverance again restored it, with new and
additional lustre; and besides adding to the splendor of the edifice, augmented
its internal comforts by forming a library of considerable importance and
value. We may judge how dearly they valued a Bibliotheca in those old days by
the contribution of one benevolent book-lover—Egebric, the second abbot of that
name, a man whom Ingulphus says was “far more devoted to sacred learning and to
the perusal of books than skilled in secular matters”, gladdened the hearts of
the monks with a handsome library, consisting of forty original volumes in
various branches of learning, and more than one hundred volumes of different
tracts and histories, besides eighteen books for the use of the divine offices
of the church. Honor to the monk who, in the land of dearth, could amass so
bountiful a provision for the intellect to feed upon; and who encouraged our
early literature—when feeble and trembling by the renewed attacks of rapacious
invaders—by such fostering care.
In the eleventh century Croyland monastery was doomed
to fresh misfortunes; a calamitous fire, accidental in its origin, laid the
fine monastery in a heap of ruins, and scattered its library in blackened ashes
to the winds (the fire occurred in 1091. Ingulphus relates with painful
minuteness the progress of the work of destruction, and enumerates all the rich
treasures which those angry flames consumed. I should have given a longer
account of this event had not the Rev. Mr. Maitland already done so in his
interesting work on the Dark Ages). A sad and irreparable loss was that to the
Norman monks and to the students of Saxon history in modern times; for besides
four hundred Saxon charters, deeds, etc., many of the highest historical
interest and value beautifully illuminated in gold (aureis pictures) and
written in Saxon characters, the whole of the choice and ample library was
burnt, containing seven hundred volumes, besides the books of divine
offices—the Antiphons and Grailes. I will not agonize the bibliophile by
expatiating further on the sad work of destruction; but is he not somewhat
surprised that in those bookless days seven hundred volumes should have been
amassed together, besides a lot of church books and Saxon times?
Destroyed by the Danes. Peterborough
Ingulphus, who has so graphically described the
destruction of Croyland monastery by the Danes in 870, has also given the
particulars of their proceedings at the monastery of Peterborough, anciently
called Medeshanstede, to which they immediately afterwards bent their steps.
The monks, on hearing of their approach, took the precaution to guard the
monastery by all the means in their power; but the quiet habits of monastic
life were ill suited to inspire them with a warlike spirit, and after a feeble
resistance, their cruel enemies (whom the monks speak of in no gentle terms, as
the reader may imagine), soon effected an entrance; in the contest however
Tulla, the brother of Hulda, the Danish leader, was slain by a stone thrown by
one of the monks from the walls; this tended to kindle the fury of the
besiegers, and so exasperated Hulda that it is said he killed with his own hand
the whole of the poor defenseless monks, including their venerable abbot. The
sacred edifice, completely in their hands, was soon laid waste; they broke down
the altars, destroyed the monuments, and—much will the bibliophile deplore
it—set fire to their immense library “ingens bibliotheca”, maliciously tearing
into pieces all their valuable and numerous charters, evidences, and writings. The
monastery, says the historian, continued burning for fifteen days. This seat of
Saxon learning was left buried in its ruins for near one hundred years, when
Athelwold, bishop of Winchester, in the year 966, restored it; but in the
course of time, after a century of peaceful repose, fresh troubles sprang up.
When Turoldus, a Norman, who had been appointed by William the Conqueror, was
abbot, the Danes again paid them a visit of destruction. Hareward de Wake
having joined a Danish force, proceeded to the town of Peterborough;
fortunately the monks obtained some intelligence of their coming, which gave
Turoldus time to repair to Stamford with his retinue. Taurus, the Sacrist, also
managed to get away, carrying with him some of their treasures, and among them
a text of the Gospels, which he conveyed to his superior at Stamford, and by
that means preserved them. On the arrival of the Danes, the remaining monks
were prepared to offer a somewhat stern resistance, but without effect; for
setting fire to the buildings, the Danes entered through the flames and smoke,
and pillaged the monastery of all its valuable contents; and that which they
could not carry away, they destroyed: not even sparing the shrines of holy
saints, or the miracle-working dust contained therein. The monks possessed a
great cross of a most costly nature, which the invaders endeavored to take
away, but could not on account of its weight and size; however, they broke off
the gold crown from the head of the crucifix, and the footstool under its feet,
which was made of pure gold and gems; they also carried away two golden biers,
on which the monks carried the relics of their saints; with nine silver ones.
There was certainly no monachal poverty here, for their wealth must have been
profuse; besides the above treasures, they took twelve crosses, made of gold
and silver; they also went up to the tower and took away a table of large size
and value, which the monks had hid there, trusting it might escape their
search; it was a splendid affair, made of gold and silver and precious stones,
and was usually placed before the altar. But besides all this, they robbed them
of that which those poor monkish bibliophiles loved more than all. Their
library, which they had collected with much care, and which contained many
volumes, was carried away, “with many other precious things, the like of which
were not to be found in all England”. The abbot and those monks who fortunately
escaped, afterwards returned, sad and sorrowful no doubt; but trusting in their
Divine Master and patron Saint, they ultimately succeeded in making their old
house habitable again, and well-fortified it with a strong wall, so that
formerly it used to be remarked that this building looked more like a military
establishment than a house of God.
Eminently productive was the monastery of Peterborough
in Saxon bibliomaniacs. Its ancient annals prove how enthusiastically they
collected and transcribed books. There were few indeed of its abbots who did
not help in some way or other to increase their library. Kenulfus, who was
abbot in the year 992, was a learned and eloquent student in divine and secular
learning. He much improved his monastery, and greatly added to its literary
treasures. But the benefactors of this place are too numerous to be minutely
specified here. Hugo Candidus tells us, that Kinfernus, Archbishop of York, in
1056, gave them many valuable ornaments; and among them a fine copy of the
Gospels, beautifully adorned with gold. This puts us in mind of Leofricus, a
monk of the abbey, who was made abbot in the year 1057. He is said to have been
related to the royal family, a circumstance which may account for his great
riches. He was a sad pluralist, and held at one time no less than five
monasteries, viz. Burton, Coventy, Croyland, Thorney, and Peterborough. He gave
to the church of Peterborough many and valuable utensils of gold, silver, and
precious stones, and a copy of the Gospels bound in gold.
Benedict and his books
But in all lights, whether regarded as an author or a
bibliophile, great indeed was Benedict, formerly prior of Canterbury, and
secretary to Thomas à Becket, of whom it is supposed he wrote a life. He was
made abbot of Peterborough in the year 1177; he compiled a history of Henry II
and king Richard I; he is spoken of in the highest terms of praise by Robert
Swapham for his profound wisdom and great erudition in secular matters. There
can be no doubt of his book-loving passion; for during the time he was abbot he
transcribed himself, and ordered others to transcribe, a great number of books.
Swapham has preserved a catalogue of them, which is so interesting that I have
transcribed it entire. The list is entitled: de libris ejus.
· Plurimos quoque libros 3 scribere fecit, quorum
nomina subnotantur.
· Vetus et Novum Testamentum in uno volumine.
· Vetus et Novum Testamentum in 4 volumina.
· Quinque libri
Moysi glosati in uno volumine.
· Sexdecim
Prophetæ glosati in uno volumine.
· Duodecim
minores glosati Prophetæ in uno volumine.
· Liber Regum glosatus, paralipomenon glosatus.
Job, Parabolæ Solomonis et Ecclesiastes, Cantica Canticorum glosati in uno
volumine.
· Liber Ecclesiasticus et Liber Sapientiæ
glosatus in uno volumine.
· Tobyas, Judith, Ester et Esdras, glosati in uno
volumine.
· Liber Judicum glosatus.
· Scholastica hystoria.
· Psalterium glosatum.
· Item non glosatum.
· Item Psalterium.
· Quatuor Evangelia glosata in uno volumine.
· Item Mathæus et Marcus in uno volumine.
· Johannes et Lucas in uno volumine.
· Epistolæ Pauli glosatæ Apocalypsis et Epistolæ
Canonicæ glosata in uno volumine.
· Sententiæ Petri Lombardi.
· Item Sententiæ ejusdem.
· Sermones Bernardi Abbatis Clarevallensis.
· Decreta Gratiani.
· Item Decreta Gratiani.
· Summa Ruffini de Decretis.
· Summa Johannes Fuguntini de Decretis.
· Decretales Epistolæ.
· Item Decretales Epistolæ.
· Item Decretales Epistolæ cum summa sic
incipiente; Olim. Institutiones Justiniani cum autenticis et Infortiatio
Digestum vetus.
· Tres partes cum digesto novo.
· Summa Placentini.
· Totum Corpus Juris in duobus voluminibus.
· Arismetica.
· Epistolæ Senecæ cum aliis Senecis in uno
volumine.
· Martialis totus et Terentius in uno volumine.
· Morale dogma philosophorum.
· Gesta Alexandri et Liber Claudii et Claudiani.
· Summa Petri Heylæ de Grammatica, cum multis
allis rebus in uno volumine.
· Gesta Regis Henrica secunda et Genealogiæ ejus.
· Interpretatione
Hebraicorum nominum.
· Libellus de
incarnatione verbi. Liber Bernardi Abbatis ad Eugenium papam.
· Missale.
· Vitæ Sancti Thomæ Martyris.
· Miracula ejusdem in quinque voluminibus.
· Liber Richardi Plutonis, qui dicitur, unde
Malum Meditationes Anselmi.
· Practica Bartholomæi cum multis allis rebus in
uno volumine.
· Ars Physicæ Pantegni, et practica ipsius in uno
volumine.
· Almazor et Diascoridis
de virtutibus herbarum.
· Liber Dinamidiorum et aliorum multorum in uno
volumine.
· Libellus de Compoto.
Sixty volumes! perhaps containing near 100 separate
works, and all added to the library in the time of one abbot; surely this is
enough to controvert the opinion that the monks cared nothing for books or
learning, and let not the Justin, Seneca, Martial, Terence, and Claudian escape
the eye of the reader, those monkish bookworms did care a little, it would
appear, for classical literature. But what will he say to the fine Bibles that
crown and adorn the list? The two complete copies of the Vetus et Novum
Testamentum, and the many glossed portions of the sacred writ, reflect
honor upon the Christian monk, and placed him conspicuously among the bible
students of the middle ages; proving too, that while he could esteem the wisdom
of Seneca, and the vivacity of Terence, and feel a deep interest in the secular
history of his own times, he did not lose sight of the fountain of all
knowledge, but gave to the Bible his first care, and the most prominent place
on his library shelf. Besides the books which the abbots collected for the
monastery, they often possessed a private selection for their own use; there
are instances in which these collections were of great extent; some of which we
shall notice, but generally speaking they seldom numbered many volumes. Thus
Robert of Lyndeshye, who was abbot of Peterborough in 1214, only possessed six
volumes, which were such as he constantly required for reference or devotion;
they consisted of a Numerale Majestri W. de Montibus cum alliis rebus; Tropi
Majestri Petri cum diversis summis; Sententiæ Petri Pretanensis; Psalterium
Glossatum; Aurora; Psalterium; Historiale. These were books continually in
requisition, and which he possessed to save the trouble of constantly referring
to the library. His successor, abbot Holdernesse, possessed also twelve
volumes, and Walter of St. Edmundsbury Abbot, in 1233, had eighteen books, and
among them a fine copy of the Bible for his private study. Robert of Sutton in
1262, also abbot of Peterborough, possessed a similar number, containing a copy
of the Liber Naturalium Anstotelis; and his successor, Richard of London, among
ten books which formed his private library, had the Consolation of Philosophy,
a great favorite in the monasteries. In the year 1295 William of Wodeforde,
collected twenty volumes, but less than that number constituted the library of
Adam de Botheby, who was abbot of Peterborough many years afterwards, but among
them I notice a Seneca, with thirty-six others contained in the same volume.
Abbot Godfrey, elected in the year 1299, was a great
benefactor to the church, as we learn from Walter de Whytlesse, who gives a
long list of donations made by him; among a vast quantity of valuables, “he
gave to the church two Bibles, one of which was written in France”, with about
twenty other volumes. In the war which occurred during his abbacy, between John
Baliol of Scotland and Edward I of England, the Scots applied to the pope for
his aid and council; his holiness deemed it his province to interfere, and
directed letters to the king of England, asserting that the kingdom of Scotland
appertained to the Church of Rome; in these letters he attempt to prove that it
was opposed to justice, and, what he deemed of still greater importance, to the
interests of the holy see, that the king of England should not have dominion
over the kingdom of Scotland. The pope's messengers on this occasion were
received by abbot Godfrey; Walter says that "He honorably received two
cardinals at Peterborough with their retinues, who were sent by the pope to
make peace between the English and the Scotch, and besides cheerfully
entertaining them with food and drink, gave them divers presents; to one of the
cardinals, named Gaucelin, he gave a certain psalter, beautifully written in
letters of gold and purple, and marvellously illuminated, literis aureis et
assuris scriptum et mirabiliter luminatum. I give this anecdote to show how
splendidly the monks inscribed those volumes designed for the service of the
holy church. I ought to have mentioned before that Wulstan, archbishop of York,
gave many rare and precious ornaments to Peterborough, nor should I omit a
curious little book anecdote related of him. He was born at Jceritune in
Warwickshire, and was sent by his parents to Evesham, and afterwards to
Peterborough, where he gave great indications of learning. His schoolmaster,
who was an Anglo-Saxon named Erventus, was a clever calligraphist, and is said to
have been highly proficient in the art of illuminating; he instructed Wulstan
in these accomplishments, who wrote under his direction a sacramentary and a
psalter, and illuminated the capitals with many pictures painted in gold and
colors; they were executed with so much taste that his master presented the
sacramentary to Canute, and the psalter to his queen.
Anecdotes of Collectors. Catalogue of the Library of
the Abbey of Peterborough. Leicester Library, etc.
From these few facts relative to Peterborough
Monastery, the reader will readily perceive how earnestly books were collected
by the monks there, and will be somewhat prepared to learn that a catalogue of
1,680 volumes is preserved, which formerly constituted the library of that
fraternity of bibliophiles. This fine old catalogue, printed by Gunton in his
history of the abbey, covers fifty folio pages; it presents a faithful mirror
of the literature of its day, and speaks well for the bibliomanical spirit of
the monks of Peterborough. Volumes of patristic eloquence and pious erudition
crowd the list; chronicles, poetry, and philosophical treatises are mingled
with the titles of an abundant collection of classic works, full of the lore of
the ancient world. Although the names may be similar to those which I have
extracted from other catalogues, I must not omit to give a few of them; I find
works of—
· Augustine.
· Ambrose.
· Albinus.
· Cassiodorus.
· Gregory.
· Cyprian.
· Seneca.
· Prosper.
· Tully.
· Bede.
· Basil.
· Lanfranc.
· Chrysostom.
· Jerome.
· Eusebius.
· Bœthius.
· Isidore.
· Origin.
· Dionysius.
· Cassian.
· Bernard.
· Anselm.
· Alcuinus.
· Honorius.
· Donatus.
· Macer.
· Persius.
· Virgil.
· Isagoge of Porphry.
· Aristotle.
· Entyci Grammatica.
· Socrates.
· Ovid.
· Priscian.
· Hippocrates.
· Horace.
· Sedulus.
· Theodulus.
· Sallust.
· Macrobius.
· Cato.
· Prudentius.
But although they possessed these fine authors and
many others equally choice, I am not able to say much for the biblical
department of their library, I should have anticipated a goodly store of the
Holy Scriptures, but in these necessary volumes they were unusually poor. But I
suspect the catalogue to have been compiled during the fifteenth century, and I
fear too, that in that age the monks were growing careless of Scripture
reading, or at least relaxing somewhat in the diligence of their studies;
perhaps they devoured the attractive pages of Ovid, and loved to read his
amorous tales more than became the holiness of their priestly calling. At any
rate we may observe a marked change as regards the prevalence of the Bible in
monastic libraries between the twelfth and the fifteenth century. It is true we
often find them in those of the later age; but sometimes they are entirely
without, and frequently only in detached portions. I may illustrate this by a
reference to the library of the Abbey of St. Mary de la Pré at Leicester, which
gloried in a collection of 600 volumes, of the choicest and almost venerable
writers. It was written in the year 1477, by William Chartye, prior of the
abbey, and an old defective and worn out Bible, Biblie defect et usit, with
some detached portions, was all that fine library contained of the Sacred Writ.
The bible defect et usit speaks volumes to the praise of the ancient
monks of that house, for it was by their constant reading and study, that it
had become so thumbed and worn; but it stamps with disgrace the affluent monks
of the fifteenth century, who, while they could afford to buy, in the year
1470, some thirty volumes with a Seneca, Ovid, Claudian, Macrobius, Æsop, etc.,
among them, and who found time to transcribe twice as many more, thought not of
restoring their bible tomes, or adding one book of the Holy Scripture to their
crowded shelves. But alas! monachal piety was waxing cool and indifferent then,
and it is rare to find the honorable title of an Amator Scripturarum affixed to
a monkish name in the latter part of the fifteenth century.
CHAPTER VII
King Alfred an "amator librorum" and an
author.
The latter part of the tenth century was a most
memorable period in the annals of monkish bibliomania, and gave birth to one of
the brightest scholars that ever shone in the dark days of our Saxon
forefathers. King Alfred, in honor of whose talents posterity have gratefully
designated the Great, spread a fostering care over the feeble remnant of native
literature which the Danes in their cruel depredations had left unmolested. The
noble aspirations of this royal student and patron of learning had been
instilled into his mind by the tender care of a fond parent. It was from the
pages of a richly illuminated little volume of Saxon poetry, given to him by
the queen as a reward for the facility with which he had mastered its contents,
that he first derived that intense love of books which never forsook him,
though the sterner duties of his after position frequently required his
thoughts and energies in another channel. Having made himself acquainted with
this little volume, Alfred found a thirst for knowledge grow upon him, and
applied his youthful mind to study with the most zealous ardor; but his
progress was considerably retarded, because he could not, at that time, find a
Grammaticus capable of instructing him, although he searched the kingdom of the
West Saxons. Yet he soon acquired the full knowledge of his own language, and
the Latin it is said he knew as well, and was able to use with a fluency equal
to his native tongue; he could comprehend the meaning of the Greek, although
perhaps he was incapable of using it to advantage. He was so passionately fond
of books, and so devoted to reading, that he constantly carried about him some
favorite volume which, as a spare moment occurred, he perused with the avidity
of an helluo librorum. This pleasing anecdote related by Asser is
characteristic of his natural perseverance.
When he ascended the throne, he lavished abundant
favors upon all who were eminent for their literary acquirements; and displayed
in their distribution the utmost liberality and discrimination. Asser, who
afterwards became his biographer, was during his life the companion and
associate of his studies, and it is from his pen we learn that, when an
interval occurred inoccupied by his princely duties, Alfred stole into the
quietude of his study to seek comfort and instruction from the pages of those
choice volumes, which comprised his library. But Alfred was not a mere
bookworm, a devourer of knowledge without purpose or without meditation of his
own, he thought with a student's soul well and deeply upon what he read, and
drew from his books those principles of philanthropy, and those high resolves,
which did such honor to the Saxon monarch. He viewed with sorrow the
degradation of his country, and the intellectual barrenness of his time; the
warmest aspiration of his soul was to diffuse among his people a love for
literature and science, to raise them above their Saxon sloth, and lead them to
think of loftier matters than war and carnage. To effect this noble aim, the
highest to which the talents of a monarch can be applied, he for a length of
time devoted his mind to the translation of Latin authors into the vernacular
tongue. In his preface to the Pastoral of Gregory which he translated, he
laments the destruction of the old monastic libraries by the Danes. “I saw”, he
writes, “before alle were spoiled and burnt, how the churches throughout
Britain were filled with treasures and books”, which must have presented a
striking contrast to the illiterate darkness which he tells us afterwards
spread over his dominions, for there were then very few paucissimi who
could translate a Latin epistle into the Saxon language.
When Alfred had completed the translation of Gregory’s Pastoral, he sent a copy to each of his bishops accompanied with a
golden stylus or pen, thus conveying to them the hint that it was their duty to
use it in the service of piety and learning. Encouraged by the favorable
impression which this work immediately caused, he spared no pains to follow up
the good design, but patiently applied himself to the translation of other
valuable books which he rendered into as pleasing and expressive a version as
the language of those rude times permitted. Besides these literary labors he
also wrote many original volumes, and became a powerful orator, a learned
grammarian, an acute philosopher, a profound mathematician, and the prince of
Saxon poesy; with these exalted talents he united those of an historian, an
architect, and an accomplished musician. A copious list of his productions, the
length of which proves the fertility of his pen, will be found in the Biographica
Britannica, but names of others not there enumerated may be found in
monkish chronicles; of his Manual, which was in existence in the time of
William of Malmsbury, not a fragment has been found. The last of his labors was
probably an attempt to render the psalms into the common language, and so
unfold that portion of the Holy Scriptures to our Saxon ancestors.
Alfred, with the assistance of the many learned men
whom he had called to his court, restored the monasteries and schools of
learning which the Danes had desecrated, and it is said founded the university
of Oxford, where he built three halls, in the name of the Holy Trinity; for the
doctors of divinity, philosophy, and grammar. The controversy which this
subject has given rise to among the learned is too long to enter into here,
although the matter is one of great interest to the scholar and to the
antiquary.
In the year 901, this royal bibliophile, “the
victorious prince, the studious provider for widows, orphanes, and poore
people, most perfect in Saxon poetrie, most liberall endowed with wisdome,
fortitude, justice, and temperance, departed this life”; and right well did he
deserve this eulogy, for as an old chronicle says, he was “a goode clerke and
rote many bokes, and a boke he made in Englysshe, of adventures of kynges and
bataylles that had bene wne in the lande; and other bokes of gestes he them
wryte, that were of greate wisdome, and of good learnynge, thrugh whych bokes
many a man may him amende, that well them rede, and upon them loke. And thys
kynge Allured lyeth at Wynchestre”.
CHAPTER VIII
Benedict Biscop. Bede. Ceolfrid. Wilfrid.
The venerable Bede enables us to show that in the
early Saxon days the monasteries of Wearmouth and Jarrow possessed considerable
collections of books. Benedict Biscop, the most enthusiastic bibliomaniac of
the age, founded the monastery of Wearmouth in the year 674, in honor of the “Most
Holy Prince of the Apostles”. His whole soul was in the work, he spared neither
pains or expense to obtain artists of well-known and reputed talent to decorate
the holy edifice; not finding them at home, he journeyed to Gaul in search of
them, and returned accompanied by numerous expert and ingenious workmen. Within
a year the building was sufficiently advanced to enable the monks to celebrate
divine service there. He introduced glass windows and other ornaments into his
church, and furnished it with numerous books of all descriptions, innumerabilem
librorum omnis generis. Benedict was so passionately fond of books that he
took five journeys to Rome for the purpose of collecting them. In his third
voyage he gathered together a large quantity on divine erudition; some of these
he bought, or received them as presents from his friends, vel amicorum
dono largitos retulit. When he arrived at Vienne on his way home, he
collected others which he had commissioned his friends to purchase for him.
After the completion of his monastery he undertook his fourth journey to Rome;
he obtained from the Pope many privileges for the abbey, and returned in the
year 680, bringing with him many more valuable books; he was accompanied by
John the Chantor, who introduced into the English churches the Roman method of
singing. He was also a great amator librorum, and left many choice
manuscripts to the monks, which Bede writes “were still preserved in their
library”.”It was about this time that Ecgfrid (the youngest son of Oswy, or
Oswis, king of Northumbria, who succeeded his father in the year 670) gave
Benedict a portion of land on the other side of the river Wire, at a place
called Jarrow; and that enterprising and industrious abbot, in the year 684,
built a monastery thereon. No sooner was it completed, than he went a fifth
time to Rome to search for volumes to gratify his darling passion. This was the
last, but perhaps the most successful of his foreign tours, for he brought back
with him a vast quantity of sacred volumes and curious pictures. How deeply is
it to be regretted that the relation of the travels which Ceolfrid his successor
undertook, and which it is said his own pen inscribed, has been lost to us
forever. He probably spoke much of Benedict in the volume and recorded his book
pilgrimages. How dearly would the bibliomaniac revel over those early annals of
his science, could his eye meet those venerable pages--perhaps describing the
choice tomes Benedict met with in his Italian tours, and telling us how, and
what, and where he gleaned those fine collections; sweet indeed would have been
the perusal of that delectable little volume, full of the book experience of a
bibliophile in Saxon days, near twelve hundred years ago! But the ravages of
time or the fury of the Danes deprived us of this rare gem, and we are alone
dependent on Bede for the incidents connected with the life of this great man;
we learn from that venerable author that Benedict was seized with the palsy on
his return, and that languishing a few short years, he died in the year 690;
but through pain and suffering he often dwelt on the sweet treasures of his library,
and his solemn thoughts of death and immortality were intermixed with many a
fond bookish recollection. His most noble and abundant library which he
brought from Rome he constantly referred to, and gave strict
injunctions that the monks should apply the utmost care to the preservation of
that rich and costly treasure, in the collection of which so many perils and
anxious years were spent.
We all know the force of example, and are not
surprised that the sweet mania which ruled so potently over the mind of
Benedict, spread itself around the crowned head of royalty. Perhaps book
collecting was beginning to make “a stir”,"and the rich and powerful among
the Saxons were regarding strange volumes with a curious eye. Certain it is
that Egfride, or Aelfride, the proud king of Northumbria, fondly coveted a
beautiful copy of the geographer’s (codice mirandi operis), which
Benedict numbered among his treasures; and so eagerly too did he desire its
possession, that he gave in exchange a portion of eight hides of land, near the
river Fresca, for the volume; and Ceolfrid, Benedict's successor, received it.
How useful must Benedict’s library have been in
ripening the mind that was to cast a halo of immortality around that old
monastery, and to generate a renown which was long to survive the grey walls of
that costly fane; for whilst we now fruitlessly search for any vestiges of its
former being, we often peruse the living pages of Bede the venerable with
pleasure and instruction, and we feel refreshed by the breath of piety and
devotion which they unfold; yet it must be owned the superstition of Rome will
sometimes mar a devout prayer and the simplicity of a Christian thought. But
all honor to his manes and to his memory! for how much that is admirable in the
human character--how much sweet and virtuous humility was hid in him, in the
strict retirement of the cloister. The writings of that humble monk outlive the
fame of many a proud ecclesiastic or haughty baron of his day; and well they
might, for how homely does his pen record the simple annals of that far distant
age. Much have the old monks been blamed for their bad Latin and their humble
style; but far from upbraiding, I would admire them for it; for is not the
inelegance of diction which their unpretending chronicles display, sufficiently
compensated by their charming simplicity. As for myself, I have sometimes read
them by the blaze of my cheerful hearth, or among the ruins of some old
monastic abbey, till in imagination I beheld the events which they attempt to record,
and could almost hear the voice of the “goode olde monke” as he relates
the deeds of some holy man--in language so natural and idiomatic are they
written.
But as we were saying, Bede made ample use of Benedict’s
library; and the many Latin and Greek books, which he refers to in the course
of his writings, were doubtless derived from that source. Ceolfrid, the
successor of Benedict, “a man of great zeal, of acute wisdom, and bold in
action”, was a great lover of books, and under his care the libraries of
Wearmouth and Jarrow became nearly doubled in extent; of the nature of these
additions we are unable to judge, but probably they were not contemptible.
Wilfrid, bishop of Northumbria, was a dear and
intimate friend of Biscop’s, and was the companion of one of his pilgrimages to
Rome. In his early youth he gave visible signs of a heart full of religion and
piety, and he sought by a steady perusal of the Holy Scriptures, in the little
monastery of Lindesfarne, to garnish his mind with that divine lore with which
he shone so brightly in the Saxon church. It was at the court of Ercenbyrht,
king of Kent, that he met with Benedict Biscop; and the sympathy which their
mutual learning engendered gave rise to a warm and devoted friendship between
them. Both inspired with an ardent desire to visit the apostolic see, they set
out together for Rome; and it was probably by the illustrious example of his
fellow student and companion, that Wilfrid imbibed that book-loving passion
which he afterwards displayed on more than one occasion. On his return from
Rome, Alfred of Northumbria bestowed upon him the monastery of Rhypum in the
year 661, and endowed it with certain lands. Peter of Blois records, in his
life of Wilfrid, that this “man of God” gave the monastery a copy of the
gospels, a library, and many books of the Old and New Testament, with certain
tablets made with marvellous ingenuity, and ornamented with gold and precious
stones. Wilfrid did not long remain in the monastery of Ripon, but advanced to
higher honors, and took a more active part in the ecclesiastical affairs of the
time (in 665 he was raised to the episcopacy of all Northumbria). But I am not
about to pursue his history, or to attempt to show how his hot and imperious
temper, or the pride and avarice of his disposition, wrought many grievous
animosities in the Saxon church; or how by his prelatical ambition he
deservedly lost the friendship of his King and his ecclesiastical honors (he
was deprived of his bishopric in the year 678, and the see was divided into
those of York and Hexham).
Boniface the Saxon Missionary. His love of books
About this time, and contemporary with Bede, we must
not omit one who appears as a bright star in the early Christian church.
Boniface, the Saxon missionary (his Saxon name was Winfrid, or Wynfrith, but he
is generally called Boniface, Archbishop of Metz), was remarked by his parents
to manifest at an early age signs of that talent which in after years achieved
so much, and advanced so materially the interests of piety and the cause of
civilization. When scarcely four years old his infant mind seemed prone to
study, which growing upon him as he increased in years, his parent placed him
in the monastery of Exeter. His stay there was not of long duration, for he
shortly after removed to a monastery in Hampshire under the care of Wybert. In
seclusion and quietude he there studied with indefatigable ardor, and fortified
his mind with that pious enthusiasm and profound erudition, which enabled him
in a far distant country to render such service to the church. He was made a
teacher, and when arrived at the necessary age he was ordained priest. In the
year 710, a dispute having occurred among the western church of the Saxons, he
was appointed to undertake a mission to the archbishop of Canterbury on the
subject. Pleased perhaps with the variety and bustle of travel, and inspired
with a holy ambition, he determined to attempt the conversion of the German
people, who, although somewhat acquainted with the gospel truths, had
nevertheless deviated materially from the true faith, and returned again to
their idolatry and paganism. Heedless of the danger of the expedition, but
looking forward only to the consummation of his fond design, he started on his
missionary enterprise, accompanied by one or two of his monkish brethren.
He arrived at Friesland in the year 716, and proceeded
onwards to Utrecht; but disappointments and failures awaited him. The revolt of
the Frieslanders and the persecution then raging there against the Christians,
dissipated his hopes of usefulness; and with a heavy heart, no doubt, Boniface
retraced his steps, and re-embarked for his English home. Yet hope had not
deserted him--his philanthropic resolutions were only delayed for a time; for
no sooner had the dark clouds of persecution passed away than his adventurous
spirit burst forth afresh, and shone with additional lustre and higher
aspirations. After an interval of two years we find him again starting on
another Christian mission. On reaching France he proceeded immediately to Rome,
and procured admission to the Pope, who, ever anxious for the promulgation of
the faith and for the spiritual dominion of the Roman church, highly approved
of the designs of Boniface, and gave him letters authorizing his mission among
the Thuringians; invested with these powers and with the pontifical blessing,
he took his departure from the holy city, well stored with the necessary
ornaments and utensils for the performance of the ecclesiastical rites, besides
a number of books to instruct the heathens and to solace his mind amidst the
cares and anxieties of his travels. After some few years the fruits of his
labor became manifest, and in 723 he had baptized vast multitudes in the true
faith. His success was perhaps unparalleled in the early annals of the church,
and remind us of the more recent wonders wrought by the Jesuit missionaries in
India (the mere act of baptizing constitutes “conversion” in Jesuitical
phraseology; and thousands were so converted in a few days by the followers of
Ignatius. A similar process was used in working out the miracles of the Saxon
missionary. He was rather too conciliating and too anxious for a “converting
miracle”, to be over particular; but it was all for the good of the church
papal, to whom he was a devoted servant; the church papal therefore could not
see the fault). Elated with these happy results, far greater than even his
sanguine mind had anticipated, he sent a messenger to the Pope to acquaint his
holiness of these vast acquisitions to his flock, and soon after he went
himself to Rome to receive the congratulations and thanks of the Pontiff; he
was then made bishop, and entrusted with the ecclesiastical direction of the
new church. After his return, he spent many years in making fresh converts and
maintaining the discipline of the faithful. But all these labors and these
anxieties were terminated by a cruel and unnatural death; on one of his
expeditions he was attacked by a body of pagans, who slew him and nearly the
whole of his companions, but it is not here that a Christian must look for his
reward--he must rest his hopes on the benevolence and mercy of his God in a
distant and far better world. He who would wish to trace more fully these
events, and so catch a glimpse of the various incidents which touch upon the
current of his life, must not keep the monk constantly before his mind, he must
sometimes forget him in that capacity and regard him as a student,
and that too in the highest acceptation of the term. His youthful studies,
which I have said before were pursued with unconquerable energy, embraced
grammar, poetry, rhetoric, history, and the exposition of the Holy Scriptures;
the Bible, indeed, he read unceasingly, and drew from it much of the vital
truth with which it is inspired; but he perhaps too much tainted it with
traditional interpretation and patristical logic. A student’s life is always
interesting; like a rippling stream, its unobtrusive gentle course is ever
pleasing to watch, and the book-worms seems to find in it the counterpart of
his own existence. Who can read the life and letters of the eloquent Cicero, or
the benevolent Pliny, without the deepest interest; or mark their anxious
solicitude after books, without sincere delight. Those elegant epistles reflect
the image of their private studies, and so to behold Boniface in a student’s
garb, to behold his love of books and passion for learning, we must alike have
recourse to his letters.
The epistolary correspondence of the middle ages is a
mirror of those times, far more faithful as regards their social condition than
the old chronicles and histories designed for posterity; written in the
reciprocity of friendly civilities, they contain the outpourings of the heart,
and enable us to peep into the secret thoughts and motives of the writer; “for
out of the fulness of the hearth the mouth speaketh”. Turning over the letters
of Boniface, we cannot but be forcibly struck with his great knowledge of
Scripture; his mind seems to have been quite a concordance in itself, and we
meet with epistles almost solely framed of quotations from the sacred books, in
substantiation of some principle, or as grounds for some argument advanced.
These are pleasurable instances, and convey a gentle hint that the greater
plenitude of the Bible has not, in all cases, emulated us to study it with
equal energy; there are few who would now surpass the Saxon bishop in biblical
reading.
Most students have felt, at some period or other, a
thirst after knowledge without the means of assuaging it--have felt a craving
after books when their pecuniary circumstances would not admit of their
acquisition, such will sympathize with Boniface, the student in the wilds of
Germany, who, far from monastic libraries, sorely laments in some of his
letters this great deprivation, and entreats his friends, sometimes in most
piteous terms, to send him books. In writing to Daniel, Bishop of Winchester,
he asks for copies, and begs him to send the book of the six prophets, clearly
and distinctly transcribed, and in large letters because his sight he says was
growing weak; and because the book of the prophets was much wanted in Germany,
and could not be obtained except written so obscurely, and the letters so
confusedly joined together, as to be scarcely readable ac connexas
litteras discere non possum. To “Majestro Lul” he writes for the
productions of bishop Aldhelm, and other works of prose, poetry, and rhyme, to
console him in his peregrinations ad consolationem peregrinationis mea.
With Abbess Eadburge he frequently corresponded, and received from her many
choice and valuable volumes, transcribed by her nuns and sometimes by her own
hands; at one period he writes in glowing terms and with a grateful pen for the
books thus sent him, and at another time he sends for a copy of the Gospels. “Execute”,
says he, “a glittering lamp for our hands, and so illuminate the hearts of the
Gentiles to a study of the Gospels and to the glory of Christ; and intercede, I
pray thee, with your pious prayers for these pagans who are committed by the
apostles to our care, that by the mercy of the Saviour of the world they may be
delivered from their idolatrous practices, and united to the congregation of
mother church, to the honor of the Catholic faith, and to the praise and glory
of His name, who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge
of the truth”.
All this no doubt the good abbess faithfully
fulfilled; and stimulated by his friendship and these encouraging epistles, she
set all the pens in her monastery industriously to work, and so gratified the
Saxon missionary with those book treasures, which his soul so ardently loved;
certain it is, that we frequently find him thanking her for books, and with
famishing eagerness craving for more; one of his letters, full of gratitude, he
accompanies with a present of a silver graphium, or writing instrument, and
soon after we find him thus addressing her:
“To the most beloved sister, Abbess Eadburge, and all
now joined to her house and under her spiritual care. Boniface, the meanest
servant of God, wisheth eternal health in Christ.
“My dearest sister, may your assistance be abundantly
rewarded hereafter in the mansions of the angels and saints above, for the kind
presents of books which you have transmitted to me. Germany rejoices in their
spiritual light and consolation, because they have spread lustre into, the dark
hearts of the German people; for except we have a lamp to guide our feet, we
may, in the words of the Lord, fall into the snares of death. Moreover, through
thy gifts I earnestly hope to be more diligent, so that my country may be
honored, my sins forgiven, and myself protected from the perils of the sea and
the violence of the tempest; and that He who dwells on high may lightly regard
my transgression, and give utterance to the words of my mouth, that the Gospel
may have free course, and be glorified among men to the honor of Christ”.
Writing to Egbert, Archbishop of York, of whose
bibliomaniacal character and fine library we have yet to speak, Boniface thanks
that illustrious collector for the choice volumes he had kindly sent him, and
further entreats Egbert to procure for him transcripts of the smaller
works opusculi and other tracts of Bede, “who, I hear”, he
writes, “has, by the divine grace of the Holy Spirit, been permitted to spread
such lustre over your country”. These, that kind and benevolent prelate sent to
him with other books, and received a letter full of gratitude in return, but
with all the boldness of a hungry student still asking for more! especially for
Bede’s Commentary on the Parables of Solomon. He sents to Archbishop Nothelm
for a copy of the Questions of St. Augustine to Pope Gregory, with the answers
of the pope, which he says he could not obtain from Rome; and in writing to
Cuthbert, also Archbishop of Canterbury, imploring the aid of his earnest
prayers, he does not forget to ask for books, but hopes that he may be speedily
comforted with the works of Bede, of whose writings he was especially fond, and
was constantly sending to his friends for transcripts of them. In a letter to
Huetberth he writes for the “most sagacious dissertations of the monk Bede”,
and to the Abbot Dudde he sends a begging message for the Commentaries on the
Epistles of Paul to the Romans and to the Corinthians by the same. In a letter
to Lulla, Bishop of Coena, he deplores the want of books on the phenomena and
works of nature, which, he says, were omnio incognitum there,
and asks for a book on Cosmography; and on another occasion Lulla supplied
Boniface with many portions of the Holy Scriptures, and Commentaries upon them.
Many more of his epistles might be quoted to illustrate the Saxon missionary as
an amator librorum, and to display his profound erudition. In one of his
letters we find him referring to nearly all the celebrated authors of the
church, and so aptly, that we conclude he must have had their works on his
desk, and was deeply read in patristical theology. Boniface has been fiercely
denounced for his strong Roman principles, and for his firm adherence to the
interests of the pope. Of his theological errors, or his faults as a church
disciplinarian, I have nothing here to do, but leave that delicate question to
the ecclesiastical historian, having vindicated his character from the charge
of ignorance, and displayed some pleasing traits which he evinced as a student
and book-collector. It only remains to be mentioned, that many of the
membranous treasures, which Boniface had so eagerly searched for and collected
from all parts, were nearly lost forever. The pagans, who murdered Boniface and
his fellow-monks, on entering their tents, discovered little to gratify their
avarice, save a few relics and a number of books, which, with a barbarism corresponding
with their ignorance, they threw into the river as useless; but fortunately,
some of the monks, who had escaped from their hands, observing the transaction,
recovered them and carried them away in safety with the remains of the martyred
missionary, who was afterwards canonized Saint Boniface.
Egbert of York. Alcuin.
The must remarkable book collector contemporary with
Boniface, was Egbert of York, between whom, as we have seen, a bookish
correspondence was maintained. This illustrious prelate was brother to King
Egbert, of Northumbria, and received his education under Bishop Eata, at
Hexham, about the year 686. He afterwards went on a visit to the Apostolic See,
and on his return was made Archbishop of York (in the year 731). He
probably collected at Rome many of the fine volumes which comprised his
library, and which was so celebrated in those old Saxon days; and which will be
ever renowned in the annals of ancient bibliomania. The immortal Alcuin sang
the praises of this library in a tedious lay; and what glorious tomes of
antiquity he there enumerates! But stay, my pen should tarry whilst I introduce
that worthy bibliomaniac to my reader, and relate some necessary anecdotes and
facts connected with his early life and times.
Alcuin was born in England, and probably in the
immediate vicinity of York; he was descended from affluent and noble parents;
but history is especially barren on this subject, and we have no information to
instruct us respecting the antiquity of his Saxon ancestry. But if obscurity
hangs around his birth, so soon as he steps into the paths of learning and
ranks with the students of his day, we are no longer in doubt or perplexity;
but are able from that period to his death to trace the occurrences of his life
with all the ease that a searcher of monkish history can expect. He had the
good fortune to receive his education from Egbert, and under his care he soon
became initiated into the mysteries of grammar, rhetoric, and jurisprudence;
which were relieved by the more fascinating study of poetry, physics, and
astronomy. So much was he esteemed by his master the archbishop, that he
entrusted him with a mission to Rome, to receive from the hands of the Pope his
pall; on his return he called at Parma, where he had an interview with Charles
the Great; who was so captivated with his eloquence and erudition that he
eagerly entreated him to remain, and to aid in diffusing throughout his kingdom
the spirit of that knowledge which he had so successfully acquired in the Saxon
monasteries. But Alcuin was equally anxious for the advancement of literature
in his own country; and being then on a mission connected with his church, he
could do no more than hold out a promise of consulting his superiors, to whose
decisions he considered himself bound to submit.
During the dominion of Charles, the ecclesiastical as
well as the political institutions of France, were severely agitated by heresy
and war: the two great questions of the age--the Worship of Images and the
Nature of Christ--divided and perplexed the members of a church which had
hitherto been permitted to slumber in peace and quietude. The most prominent of
the heretics was Felix, Bishop of Urgel, who maintained in a letter to Elipand,
Bishop of Toledo, that Christ was only the Son of God by adoption. It was about
the time of the convocation of the Council of Frankfort, assembled to consider
this point, that Alcuin returned to France at the earnest solicitation of
Charlemagne. When the business of the council was terminated, and peace was somewhat
restored, Alcuin began to think of returning to his native country; but England
at that time was a land of bloodshed and tribulation, in the midst of which it
would be vain to hope for retirement or the blessings of study; after some
deliberation, therefore, Alcuin resolved to remain in France, where there was
at least a wide field for exertion and usefulness. He communicates his
intention in a letter to Offa, King of Mercia. “I was prepared” says he, “to
come to you with the presents of King Charles, and to return to my country; but
it seemed more advisable to me for the peace of my nation to remain abroad; not
knowing what I could have done among those persons with whom no man can be
secure or able to proceed in any laudable pursuit. See every holy place laid
desolate by pagans, the altars polluted by perjury, the monasteries dishonored
by adultery, the earth itself stained with the blood of rulers and of princes.”
After the elapse of many years spent in the brilliant
court of Charles, during which time it surpassed in literary greatness any
epoch that preceded it, he was permitted to seek retirement within the walls of
the abbey of St. Martin’s at Tours. Butin escaping from the bustle and intrigue
of public life he did not allow his days to pass away in an inglorious
obscurity; but sought to complete his earthly career by inspiring the rising
generation with an honorable and christian ambition. His cloistered solitude,
far from weakening, seems to have augmented the fertility of his genius, for it
was in the quiet seclusion of this monastery that Alcuin composed the principal
portion of his works; nor are these writings an accumulation of monastic trash,
but the fruits of many a solitary hour spent in studious meditation. His method
is perhaps fantastic and unnatural; but his style is lively, and often elegant.
His numerous quotations and references give weight and interest to his
writings, and clearly proves what a fine old library was at his command, and
how well he knew the use of it. But for the elucidation of his character as a
student, or a bibliomaniac, we naturally turn to the huge mass of his epistles
which have been preserved; and in them we find a constant reference to books
which shew his intimacy with the classics as well as the patristical lore of
the church. In biblical literature he doubtless possessed many a choice and
venerable tome; for an indefatigable scripture reader was that great man. In a
curious little work of his called Interrogationes et Responsiones sui Liber
Questionorum in Genesim, we find an illustration of his usefulness in
spreading the knowledge he had gained in this department of learning. It was
written expressly for his pupil and dearest brother (carissime frater),
Sigulf, as we learn from a letter which accompanies it. He tells him that he
had composed it “that he might always have near him the means of refreshing his
memory when the more ponderous volumes of the sacred Scriptures were not at his
immediate call.”
Perhaps of all his works this is the least deserving
of our praise; the good old monk was apt to be prolix, if not tedious, when he
found the stylus in his hand and a clean skin of parchment
spread invitingly before him. But as this work was intended as a manual to be
consulted at any time, he was compelled to curb this propensity, and to reduce
his explications to a few concise sentences. Writing under this restraint, we
find little bearing the stamp of originality, not because he had nothing
original to say, but because he had not space to write it in; I think it
necessary to give this explanation, as some critics upon the learning of that
remote age select these small and ill-digested writings as fair specimens of
the literary capacity of the time, without considering why they were written or
compiled at all. But as a scribe how shall we sufficiently praise that great
man when we take into consideration the fine Bible which he executed for
Charlemagne, and which is now fortunately preserved in the British Museum. It
is a superb copy of St. Jerome’s Latin version, freed from the inaccuracies of
the scribes; he commenced it about the year 778, and did not complete it till
the year 800, a circumstance which indicates the great care he bestowed upon
it. When finished he sent it to Rome by his friend and disciple, Nathaniel, who
presented it to Charlemagne on the day of his coronation: it was preserved by
that illustrious monarch to the last day of his life. Alcuin makes frequent
mention of this work being in progress, and speaks of the labor he was
bestowing upon it. We, who blame the monks for the scarcity of the Bible among
them, fail to take into consideration the immense labor attending the
transcriptions of so great a volume; plodding and patience were necessary to
complete it. The history of this biblical gem is fraught with interest, and
well worth relating. It is supposed to have been given to the monastery of Prum
in Lorraine by Lothaire, the grandson of Charlemagne, who became a monk of that
monastery. In the year 1576 this religious house was dissolved, but the monks
preserved the manuscript, and carried it into Switzerland to the abbey of
Grandis Vallis, near Basle, where it reposed till the year 1793, when, on the
occupation of the episcopal territory of Basle by the French, all the property
of the abbey was confiscated and sold, and the MS. under consideration came
into the possession of M. Bennot, from whom, in 1822, it was purchased by M.
Speyr Passavant, who brought it into general notice, and offered it for sale to
the French Government at the price of 60,000 francs; this they declined, and
its proprietor struck of nearly 20,000 francs from the amount; still the sum
was deemed exorbitant, and with all their bibliomanical enthusiasm, the
conservers of the Royal Library allowed the treasure to escape. M. Passavant
subsequently brought it to England, where it was submitted to the Duke of
Sussex, still without success. He also applied to the trustees of the British
Museum, and Sir F. Madden informs us that “much correspondence took place; at
first he asked 12,000l. for it; then 8,000l., and at last
6,500l., which he declared an immense sacrifice!! At
length, finding he could not part with his MS. on terms so absurd, he resolved
to sell it if possible by auction; and accordingly, on the 27th of April, 1836,
the Bible was knocked down by Mr. Evans for the sum of 1,500l., but for
the proprietor himself, as there was not one real bidding for it. This result
having brought M. Speyr Passavant in some measure to his senses, overtures were
made to him on the part of the trustees to the British Museum, and the
manuscript finally became the property of the nation, for the comparatively
small sum of 750l.” There can be no doubt as to the authenticity of this
precious volume, the verses of Alcuin's, found in the manuscript, sufficiently
prove it, for he alone could write:
"Is Carolus qui jam Scribe jussit eum."
"Haec Dator Aeternus cunctorum Christe bonorum,
Munera de donis accipe sancta tuis,
Quae Pater Albinus devoto pectore supplex
Nominus ad laudem obtulit ecce tui.”
Other proofs are not wanting of Alcui’'s industry as a
scribe, or his enthusiasm as an amator librorum. Mark the rapture
with which he describes the library of York Cathedral, collected by Egbert:
"Illic invenies veterum vestigia Patrum,
Quidquid habet pro se Latio Romanus in orbe,
Graecia vel quidquid transmisit Clara Latinis.
Hebraicus vel quod populus bibet imbre superno
Africa lucifluo vel quidquid lumine sparsit.
Quod Pater Hieronymus quod sensit Hilarius, atque
Ambrosius Praesul simul Augustinus, et ipse
Sanctus Athanasius, quod Orosius, edit avitus
Quidquid Gregorius summus docet, et Leo Papa;
Basilius quidquid, Fulgentius atque coruscant
Cassiodorus item, Chrysostomus atque Johannes:
Quidquid et Athelmus docuit, quid Beda Magister,
Quae Victorinus scripsaere, Boetius; atque
Historici veteres, Pompeius, Plinius, ipse
Acer Aristoteles, Rhetor quoque Tullius ingens;
Quidquoque Sedulius, vel quid canit ipse Invencus,
Alcuinus, et Clemens, Prosper, Paulinus, Arator.
Quid Fortunatus, vel quid Lactantius edunt;
Quae Maro Virgilius, Statius, Lucanus, et auctor
Artis Grammaticae, vel quid scripsaee magistri;
Quid Probus atque Focas, Donatus, Priscian usve,
Sevius, Euticius, Pompeius, Commenianus,
Invenies alios perplures, lector, ibidem
Egregios studiis, arte et sermone magistros
Plurima qui claro
scripsere volumina sensu:
Nomina sed quorum praesenti in carmine scribe
Longius est visum, quam plectri postulet usus.”
Often did Alcuin think of these goodly times with a
longing heart, and wish that he could revel among them whilst in France. How
deeply would he have regretted, how many tears would he have shed over the sad
destruction of that fine library, had he have known it; but his bones had
mingled with the dust when the Danes dispersed those rare gems of ancient lore.
If the reader should doubt the ardor of Alcuin as a book-lover, let him read
the following letter, addressed to Charlemagne, which none but a bibliomaniac
could pen.
“I, your Flaccus, according to your admonitions and
good-will, administer to some in the house of St. Martin, the sweets of the
Holy Scriptures, Sanctarum mella Scripturarum: others I inebriate
with the study of ancient wisdom; and others I fill with the fruits of
grammatical lore. Many I seek to instruct in the order of the stars which
illuminate the glorious vault of heaven; so that they may be made ornaments to
the holy church of God and the court of your imperial majesty; that the
goodness of God and your kindness may not be altogether unproductive of good.
But in doing this I discover the want of much, especially those exquisite books
of scholastic learning, which I possessed in my own country, through the
industry of my good and most devout master (Egbert). I therefore intreat your
Excellence to permit me to send into Britain some of our youths to procure
those books which we so much desire, and thus transplant into France the
flowers of Britain, that they may fructify and perfume, not only the garden at
York, but also the Paradise of Tours; and that we may say, in the words of the
song, ‘Let my beloved come into his garden and eat his pleasant fruit’;
and to the young, ‘Eat, O friends; drink, yea, drink, abundantly, O beloved’;
or exhort, in the words of the prophet Isaiah, ‘every one that thirsteth to
come to the waters, and ye that hath no money, come ye, buy and eat: yea, come,
buy wine and milk without money and without price’.
“Your Majesty is not ignorant how earnestly we are
exhorted throughout the Holy Scriptures to search after wisdom; nothing so
tends to the attainment of a happy life; nothing more delightful or more
powerful in resisting vice; nothing more honorable to an exalted dignity; and,
according to philosophy, nothing more needful to a just government of a people.
Thus Solomon exclaims, ‘Wisdom is better than rubies, and all the things
that may be desired are not to be compared to it’. It exalteth the humble
with sublime honors. ‘By wisdom kings reign and princes decree justice: by
me princes rule; and nobles, even all the judges of the earth. Blessed are they
that keep my ways, and blessed is the man that heareth me’. Continue, then,
my Lord King, to exhort the young in the palaces of your highness to earnest
pursuit in acquiring wisdom; that they may be honored in their old age, and
ultimately enter into a blessed immortality. I shall truly, according to my
ability, continue to sow in those parts the seeds of wisdom among your
servants; remembering the command, ‘In the morning sow thy seed, and in the
evening withhold not thine hand’. In my youth I sowed the seeds of learning
in the prosperous seminaries of Britain; and now, in my old age, I am doing so
in France without ceasing, praying that the grace of God may bless them in both
countries”.
Such was the enthusiasm, such the spirit of
bibliomania, which actuated the monks of those bookless days;
and which was fostered with such zealous care by Alcuin, in the cloisters of
St. Martin of Tours. He appropriated one of the apartments of the monastery for
the transcription of books, and called it the museum, in which
constantly were employed a numerous body of industrious scribes: he presided
over them himself, and continually exhorted them to diligence and care; to
guard against the inadvertencies of unskilful copyists, he wrote a small work
on orthography. We cannot estimate the merits of this essay, for only a portion
of it has been preserved; but in the fragment printed among his works, we can
see much that might have been useful to the scribes, and can believe that it
must have tended materially to preserve the purity of ancient texts. It
consists of a catalogue of words closely resembling each other, and
consequently requiring the utmost care in transcribing.
In these pleasing labors Alcuin was assisted by many
of the most learned men of the time, and especially by Arno, Archbishop of
Salzburgh, in writing to whom Alcuin exclaims, “O that I could suddenly
translate my Abacus, and with my own hands quickly embrace your
fraternity with that warmth which cannot be compressed in books. Nevertheless,
because I cannot conveniently come, I send more frequently my unpolished
letters to thee, that they may speak for me instead of the words of my mouth”.
This Arno, to whom he thus affectionately writes, was no despicable scholar; he
was a true lover of literature, and proved himself something of an amator
librorum, by causing to be transcribed or bought for his use, 150 volumes,
but about this period the bookloving mania spread far and wide--the Emperor
himself was touched with the enthusiasm; for, besides his choice private
collections, he collected together the ponderous writings of the holy fathers,
amounting to upwards of 200 volumes, bound in a most sumptuous manner, and
commanded them to be deposited in a public temple and arranged in proper order,
so that those who could not purchase such treasures might be enabled to feast
on the lore of the ancients. Thus did bibliomania flourish in the days of old.
Whitby Abbey. Caedmon. Classics in the Library of
Withby.
But I must not be tempted to remain longer in France,
though the names of many choice old book collectors would entice me to do so.
When I left England, to follow the steps of Alcuin, I was speaking of York,
which puts me in mind of the monastery of Whitby, in the same shire, on the
banks of the river Eske. It was founded by Hilda, the virgin daughter of
Hereric, nephew to King Edwin, about the year 680, who was its first abbess.
Having put her monastery in regular order, Hilda set an illustrious example of
piety and virtue, and particularly directed all under her care to a constant
reading of the holy Scriptures. After a long life of usefulness and zeal she
died deeply lamented by the Saxon Church, an event which many powerful miracles
commemorated.
In the old times of the Saxons the monastery of Whitby
was renowned for its learning; and many of the celebrated ecclesiastics of the
day received their instruction within its walls. The most interesting literary
anecdote connected with the good lady Hilda's abbacy, is the kind reception she
gave to the Saxon poet Caedmon, whose paraphrase of the Book of Genesis has
rendered his name immortal. He was wont to make “pious and religious verses, so
that whatever was interpreted to him out of Scripture, he soon after put the
same into poetical expression of much sweetness and humility in English, which
was his native language. By his verses the minds of many were often excited to
despise the world and to aspire to heaven. Others after him attempted in the
English nation to compose religious poems, but none could ever compare with
him, for he did not learn the art of poetry from man but from God”.
He was indeed, as the venerable Bede says, a poet of nature’s own teaching:
originally a rustic herdsman, the sublime gift was bestowed upon him by
inspiration, or as it is recorded, in a dream. As he slept an unknown being
appeared, and commanded him to sing.
Caedmon hesitated to make the attempt, but the
apparition retorted, “Nevertheless, thou shalt sing--sing the origin of things”.
Astonished and perplexed, our poet found himself instantaneously in possession
of the pleasing art; and, when he awoke, his vision and the words of his song
were so impressed upon his memory, that he easily repeated them to his
wondering companions. He hastened at day-break to relate these marvels and to
display his new found talents to the monks of Whitby, by whom he was joyfully
received, and as they unfolded the divine mysteries, “The good man”, says Bede,
“listened like a clean animal ruminating; and his song and his verse were so
winsome to hear, that his teachers wrote them down, and learned from his mouth.”
Some contend that an ancient manuscript in the British
Museum is the original of this celebrated paraphrase. It is just one of those
choice relics which a bibliomaniac loves to handle, but scarcely perhaps bears
evidence of antiquity so remote. It is described in the catalogue as, “The
substance of the Book of Genesis, with the Acts of Moses and Joshua, with brief
notes and annotations, part in Latin and part in Saxon by Bede and others”. The
notes, if by Bede, would tend to favor the opinion that it is the original
manuscript, or, at any rate, coeval with the Saxon bard. The volume, as a
specimen of calligraphic art, reflects honor upon the age, and is right worthy
of Lady Hilda’s monastery. There are 312 fine velum pages in this venerable and
precious volume, nearly every one of which dazzles with the talent of the
skilful illuminator. The initial letters are formed, with singular taste and
ingenuity, of birds, beasts, and flowers. To give an idea of the nature of
these pictorial embellishments--which display more splendor of coloring than
accuracy of design--I may describe the singular illumination adorning the sixth
page, which represents the birth of Eve. Adam is asleep, reclining on the
grass, which is depicted as so many inverted cones; and, if we may judge from
the appearance of our venerable forefather, he could not have enjoyed a very
comfortable repose on that memorable occasion, and the grass which grew in the
Garden of Paradise must have been of a very stubborn nature when compared with
the earth's verdure of the present day; for the weight of Adam alters not the
position of the tender herb, which supports his huge body on their extreme summits.
As he is lying on the left side Eve is ascending from a circular aperture in
his right; nor would the original, if she bore any resemblance to her monkish
portraiture, excite the envy or the admiration of the present age, or bear
comparison with her fair posterity. Her physiognomy is anything but
fascinating, and her figure is a repulsive monstrosity, adorned with
a profusion of luxurious hair of a brilliant blue!
It is foreign to our subject to enter into any
analysis of the literary beauties of this poem; let it suffice that Caedmon,
the old Saxon herdsman, has been compared to our immortal Milton; and their
names have been coupled together when speaking of a poet’s genius. But on other
grounds Caedmon claims a full measure of our praise. Not only was he the “Father
of Saxon poetry”, but to him also belongs the inestimable honor of being the
first who attempted to render into the vulgar tongue the beauties and mysteries
of the Holy Scriptures; he unsealed what had hitherto been a sealed book; his
paraphrase is the first translation of the holy writ on record. So let it not
be forgotten that to this Milton of old our Saxon ancestors were indebted for
this invaluable treasure. We are unable to trace distinctly the formation of
the monastic library of Whitby. But of the time of Richard, elected abbot in
the year 1148, a good monk, and formerly prior of Peterborough, we have a
catalogue of their books preserved. I would refer the reader to that curious
list, and ask him if it does not manifest by its contents the existence of a
more refined taste in the cloisters than he gave the old monks credit for. It
is true, the legends of saints abound in it; but then look at the choice tomes
of a classic age, whose names grace that humble catalogue, and remember that
the studies of the Whitby monks were divided between the miraculous lives of
holy men, and the more pleasing pages of the "Pagan Homer," the
eloquence of Tully, and the wit of Juvenal, of whose subject they seemed to
have been fond; for they read also the satires of Persius. I extract the names
of some of the authors contained in this monkish library:
· Ambrose.
· Hugo.
· Theodolus.
· Aratores.
· Bernard.
· Avianus.
· Gratian.
· Odo.
· Gilda.
· Maximianus.
· Eusebius.
· Plato.
· Homer.
· Cicero.
· Juvenal.
· Persius.
· Statius.
· Sedulus.
· Prosper.
· Prudentius.
· Boethius.
· Donatus.
· Rabanus
Maurus.
· Origen.
· Priscian.
· Gregory
Nazianzen.
· Josephus.
· Bede.
· Gildas.
· Isidore.
· Ruffinus.
· Guido
on Music.
· Diadema
Monachorum.
Come, the monks evidently read something besides
their Credo, and transcribed something better than “monastic trash”.
A little taste for literature and learning we must allow they enjoyed, when
they formed their library of such volumes as the above. I candidly admit, that
when I commenced these researches I had no expectations of finding a collection
of a hundred volumes, embracing so many choice works of old Greece and Rome. It
is pleasant, however, to trace these workings of bibliomania in the
monasteries; and it is a surprise quite agreeable and delicious in itself to
meet with instances like the present.
Rievall Library. Coventry
At a latter period the monastery of Rievall, in
Yorkshire, possessed an excellent library of 200 volumes. This we know by a
catalogue of them, compiled by one of the monks about the middle of the
fourteenth century, and now preserved in the library of Jesus College,
Cambridge. A transcript of this manuscript was made by Mr. Halliwell, and
published in his “Reliqua Antiqua”, from which it may be seen that the Rievall
monastery contained at that time many choice and valuable works. The numerous
writings of Sts. Augustine, Bernard, Anselm, Cyprian, Origin, Haimo, Gregory,
Ambrose, Isidore, Chrysostom, Bede, Aldhelm, Gregory Nazienzen, Ailred,
Josephus, Rabanus Maurus, Peter Lombard, Orosius, Boethius, Justin, Seneca,
with histories of the church of Britain, of Jerusalem, of King Henry, and many
others equally interesting and costly, prove how industriously they used their
pens, and how much they appreciated literature and learning. But in the
fourteenth century the inhabitants of the monasteries were very industrious in
transcribing books at a period coeval with the compilation of the Rievall
catalogue, a monk of Coventry church was plying his pen with unceasing energy;
John de Bruges wrote with his own hand thirty-two volumes for the library of
the benedictine priory of St. Mary.
The reader will see that there is little among them
worthy of much observation. The MS. begins, “These are the books which John of
Bruges, monk of Coventry, wrote for the Coventry church. Any who shall take
them away from the church without the consent of the convent, let him be
anathema”.
In primis, ymnarium in grossa littera.
Halmo upon Isaiah.
A Missal for the Infirmary.
A Missal.
Duo missalia domini Prioris Rogeris, scilicet
collectas cum secretis et postcommunione.
Benedictional for the use of the same prior.
Another Benedictional for the use of the convent.
Librum cartarum.
Martyrologium, Rule of St. Benedict and Pastoral, in
one volume.
Liber cartarum.
A Graduale, with a Tropario, and a Processional.
Psaltar for Prior Roger.
Palladium de Agricultura.
Librum experimentorum, in quo ligatur compotus
Helprici.
A book containing Compotus manualis et Merlin, etc.
An Ordinal for the Choir.
Tables for the Martyrology.
Kalendarium mortuorum.
Ditto.
Table of Responses.
Capitular.
Capitular for Prior Roger.
A Reading Book.
A book of Decretals.
Psalter for the monks in the infirmary.
Generationes Veteris et Novi Testamenti; ante
scholasticam hystoriam et ante Psalterium domini Anselmi.
Pater noster.
An Ordinal.
Tables for Peter Lombard’s Sentences.
Tables for the Psalter.
Book of the Statutes of the Church.
Verses on the praise of the blessed Mary.
The priory of St. Mary’s was founded by Leofricke, the
celebrated Earl of Mercia and his good Lady Godiva, in the year 1042. “Hollingshead
says that this Earl Leofricke was a man of great honor, wise, and discreet in
all his doings. His high wisdome and policie stood the realme in great steed
whilst he lived.... He had a noble ladie to his wife named Gudwina, at whose
earnest sute he made the citie of Couentrie free of all manner of toll except
horsses, and to haue that toll laid downe also, his foresaid wife rode naked
through the middest of the towne without other couerture, saue onlie her haire.
Moreouer partlie moued by his owne deuotion and partlie by the persuasion of
his wife, he builded or beneficiallie augmented and repared manie abbeies and
churches as the saide abbie or priorie at Couentrie--the abbeies of Wenlocke,
Worcester, Stone, Evesham, and Leot, besides Hereford.”
Worcester. Evesham.
The church of Worcester, which the good Earl had thus “beneficiallie
augmented”, the Saxon King Offa had endowed with princely munificence before
him. In the year 780, during the time of Abbot Tilhere, or Gilhere, Offa gave
to the church Croppethorne, Netherton, Elmlege Cuddeshe, Cherton, and other
lands, besides a “large Bible with two clasps, made of the purest gold”. In the
tenth century the library of Exeter Church was sufficiently extensive to
require the preserving care of an amanuensis; for according to Dr. Thomas,
Bishop Oswald granted in the year 985 three hides of land at Bredicot, one
yardland at Ginenofra, and seven acres of meadow at Tiberton, to Godinge a
monk, on condition of his fulfilling the duties of a librarian to the see, and
transcribing the registers and writings of the church. It is said that the
scribe Godinge wrote many choice books for the library. I do not find any
remarkable book donation, save now and then a volume or two, in the annals of
Worcester Church; nor have I been able to discover any old parchment catalogue
to tell of the number or rarity of their books; for although probably most monasteries
had one compiled, being enjoined to do so by the regulations of their order,
they have long ago been destroyed; for when we know that fine old manuscripts
were used by the bookbinders after the Reformation, we can easily imagine how
little value would be placed on a mere catalogue of names.
But to return again to Godiva, that illustrious lady
gave the monks, after the death of her lord, many landed possessions, and
bestowed upon them the blessings of a library.
Thomas Cobham, who was consecrated Bishop of Worcester
in the year 1317, was a great amator librorum, and spent much time and
money in collecting books. He was the first who projected the establishment of
a public library at Oxford, which he designed to form over the old Congregation
House in the churchyard of St. Mary's, but dying soon after in the year 1327,
the project was forgotten till about forty years after, when I suppose the
example of the great bibliomaniac Richard de Bury drew attention to the matter;
for his book treasures were then “deposited there, and the scholars permitted
to consult them on certain conditions”.
Bishop Carpenter built a library for the use of the
monastery of Exeter Church, in the year 1461, over the charnal house; and
endowed it with ÂŁ10 per annum as a salary for an amanuensis. But the
books deposited there were grievously destroyed during the civil wars; for on
the twenty-fourth of September, 1642, when the army under the Earl of Essex
came to Worcester, they set about “destroying the organ, breaking in pieces
divers beautiful windows, wherein the foundation of the church was lively
historified with painted glass”; they also “rifled the library, with the
records and evidences of the church, tore in pieces the Bibles and service
books pertaining to the quire”" Sad desecration of ancient literature! But
the reader of history will sigh over many such examples.
The registers of Evesham Monastery, near Worcester,
speak of several monkish bibliophiles, and the bookish anecdotes relating to
them are sufficiently interesting to demand some attention here. Ailward, who
was abbot in the year 1014, gave the convent many relics and ornaments, and
what was still better a quantity of books. He was afterwards promoted to the
see of London, over which he presided many years; but age and infirmity growing
upon him, he was anxious again to retire to Evesham, but the monks from some
cause or other were unwilling to receive him back; at this he took offence, and
seeking in the monastery of Ramsey the quietude denied him there, he demanded
back all the books he had given them. His successor Mannius was celebrated for
his skill in the fine arts, and was an exquisite worker in metals, besides an
ingenious scribe and illuminator. He wrote and illuminated with his own hand,
for the use of his monastery, a missal and a large Psalter.
Walter, who was abbot in the year 1077, gave also many
books to the library, and among the catalogue of sumptuous treasures with which
Reginald, a succeeding abbot, enriched the convent, a great textus or gospels,
with a multitude of other books, multa alia libros, are particularly
specified. Almost equally liberal were the choice gifts bestowed upon the monks
by Adam (elected AD 1161); but we find but little in our way among
them, except a fine copy of the “Old and New Testament with a gloss”. No mean
gift I ween in those old days; but one which amply compensated for the
deficiency of the donation in point of numbers. But all these were greatly
surpassed by a monk whom it will be my duty now to introduce; and to an account
of whose life and bibliomanical propensities, I shall devote a page or two.
Like many who spread a lustre around the little sphere of their own, and did
honor, humbly and quietly to the sanctuary of the church in those Gothic days,
he is unknown to many; and might, perhaps, have been entirely forgotten, had
not time kindly spared a document which testifies to his piety and
book-collecting industry. The reader will probably recollect many who, by their
shining piety and spotless life, maintained the purity of the Christian faith
in a church surrounded by danger and ignorance, and many a bright name,
renowned for their virtue or their glory of arms, who flourished during the
early part of the thirteenth century; but few have heard of a good and humble
monk named Thomas of Marleberg. Had circumstances designed him for a higher
sphere, had affairs of state, or weighty duties of an ecclesiastical import,
been guided by his hand, his name would have been recorded with all the
flourish of monkish adulation; but the learning and the prudence of that lowly
monk was confined to the little world of Evesham; and when his earthly manes
were buried beneath the cloisters within the old convent walls, his name and
good deeds were forgotten by the world, save in the hearts of his fraternity.
“But past is all his fame. The very spot
Where many a time he triumph'd, is forgot.”
Thomas of Marleberg, etc.
In a manuscript in the Cotton Library there is a
document called “The good deeds of Prior Thomas”, from which the following
facts have been extracted.
From this interesting memorial of his labors, we learn
that Thomas had acquired some repute among the monks for his great knowledge of
civil and canon law; so that when any difficulty arose respecting the claims or
privileges of the monastery, or when any important matter was to be transacted,
his advice was sought and received with deference and respect. Thus three years
after his admission the bishop of Worcester intimated his intention of paying
the monastery a visitation; a practice which the bishops of that see had not
enforced since the days of abbot Alurie. The abbot and convent however
considered themselves free from the jurisdiction of the bishop; and acting on
the advice of Thomas of Marleberg, they successfully repulsed him. The affair
was quite an event, and seems to have caused much sensation among them at the
time; and is mentioned to show with what esteem Thomas was regarded by his
monkish brethren. After a long enumeration of “good works2 and important
benefactions, such as rebuilding the tower and repairing the convent, we are
told that “In the second year of Randulp’s abbacy, Thomas, then dean, went with
him to Rome to a general council, where, by his prudence and advice, a new
arrangement in the business of the convent rents was confirmed, and many other
useful matters settled”. Here I am tempted to refer to the arrangements,
for they offer pleasing illustrations of the monk as an amator librorum.
Mark how his thoughts dwelt--even when surrounded by those high dignitaries of
the church, and in the midst of that important council-on the library and the
scriptorium of his monastery.
“To the Prior belongs the tythes of Beningar the
both great and small, to defray the expenses of procuring parchment, and to
procure manuscripts for transcription”.
And in another clause it is settled that
“To the Office of the Precentor belongs the Manner
of Hampton, from which he will receive five shillings annually,
besides ten and eightpence from the tythes of Stokes and Alcester, with which
he is to find all the ink and parchment for the Scribes of the Monastery,
colours for illuminating, and all that is necessary for binding the books”.
Pleasing traits are these of his bookloving passion;
and doubtless under his guidance the convent library grew and flourished
amazingly. But let us return to the account of his “good works”.
“Returning from Rome after two years he was elected
sacrist. He then made a reading-desk behind the choir, which was much wanted in
the church, and appointed stated readings to be held near the tomb of Saint
Wilsius.... Leaving his office thus rich in good works, he was then elected
prior. In this office he buried his predecessor, Prior John, in a new
mausoleum; and also John, surnamed Dionysius; of the latter of whom Prior
Thomas was accustomed to say,'that he had never known any man who so perfectly
performed every kind of penance as he did for more than thirty years, in
fasting and in prayer; in tears and in watchings; in cold and in corporeal
inflictions; in coarseness and roughness of clothing, and in denying himself
bodily comforts, far more than any other of the brethren; all of which he
rather dedicated in good purposes and to the support of the poor.”
Thus did many an old monk live, practising all this
with punctilious care as the essence of a holy life, and resting upon the
fallacy that these cruel mortifyings of the flesh would greatly facilitate the
acquisition of everlasting ease and joy in a better world; as if God knew not,
better than themselves, what chastisements and afflictions were needful for them.
We may sigh with pain over such instances of mistaken piety and fanatical zeal
in all ages of the church; yet with all their privations, and with all their
macerations of the flesh, there was a vast amount of human pride mingled with
their humiliation. But He who sees into the hearts of all--looking in his
benevolence more at the intention than the outward form, may perhaps sometimes
find in it the workings of a true christian piety, and so reward it with his
love. Let us trust so in the charity of our faith, and proceed to notice that
portion of the old record which is more intimately connected with our subject.
We read that:
“Thomas had brought with him to the convent, on his
entering, many books, of both canon and civil law; as well as the books by
which he had regulated the schools of Oxford and Exeter before he became a
monk. He likewise had one book of Democritus; and the book of Antiparalenion,
a gradual book, according to Constantine; Isidore’s Divine Offices, and
the Quadrivium of Isidore; Tully’s de Amicitia; de Senectute
et de Paradoxis; Lucan, Juvenal, and many other authors, et multos
alios auctores, with a great number of sermons, with many writings on
theological questions; on the art and rules of grammar and the book of accents.
After he was prior he made a great breviary, better than any at that time in
the monastery, with Haimo, on the Apocalypse, and a book containing the lives
of the patrons of the church of Evesham; with an account of the deeds of all
the good and bad monks belonging to the church, in one volume. He also wrote
and bound up the same lives and acts in another volume separately. He made also
a great Psalter, magnum psalterium, superior to any contained in
the monastery, except the glossed ones. He collected and wrote all the
necessary materials for four antiphoners, with their musical notes, himself;
except what the brothers of the monastery transcribed for him. He also finished
many books that William of Lith, of pious memory, commenced--the Marterologium,
the Exceptio Missae, and some excellent commentaries on the Psalter and
Communion of the Saints in the old antiphoners. He also bought the four
Gospels, with glosses, and Isaiah and Ezekiel, also glossed; the Pistillae upon
Matthew; some Allegories on the Old Testament; the Lamentations of Jeremiah,
with a gloss; the Exposition of the Mass, according to Pope Innocent; and the
great book of Alexander Necham, which is called Corrogationes Promethea
de partibus veteris testamenti et novae.... He also caused to be transcribed
in large letters the book concerning the offices of the abbey, from the
Purification of St. Mary to the Feast of Easter; the prelections respecting
Easter; Pentecost, and the blessings at the baptismal fonts. He also caused a
volume, containing the same works, to be transcribed, but in a smaller hand;
all of which the convent had not before. He made also the tablet for the
locutory in the chapel of St. Anne, towards the west. After the altar of St.
Mary in the crypts had been despoiled by thieves of its books and ornaments, to
the value of ten pounds, he contributed to their restoration.
Thomas was equally liberal in other matters. His whole
time and wealth were spent in rebuilding and repairing the monastery and adding
to its comforts and splendor. He had a great veneration for antiquity, and was
especially anxious to restore those parts which were dilapidated by time; the
old inscriptions on the monuments and altars he carefully re-inscribed. It is
recorded that he renewed the inscription on the great altar himself, without
the aid of a book, sine libro; which was deemed a mark of profound
learning in my lord abbot by his monkish surbordinates.
With this I conclude my remarks on Thomas of
Marleberg, leaving these extracts to speak for him. It is pleasing to find that
virtue so great, and industry so useful met with its just reward; and that the
monks of Evesham proved how much they appreciated such talents, by electing him
their abbot, in 1229, which, for seven years he held with becoming piety and
wisdom.
The annals of the monastery testify that “In the year
of our Lord one thousand three hundred and ninety-two, and the fifteenth of the
reign of King Richard the Second, on the tenth calends of May, died the
venerable Prior Nicholas Hereford, of pious memory, who, as prior of the church
of Evesham, lived a devout and religious life for forty years”. He held that
office under three succeeding abbots, and filled it with great honor and
industry. He was a dear lover of books, and spent vast sums in collecting together
his private library, amounting to more than 100 volumes; some of these he wrote
with his own hand, but most of them he bought emit. A list of these
books is given in the Harleian Register, and many of the volumes are described
as containing a number of tracts, bound up in one, cum aliis
tractatibus in eodem volumine. Some of these display the industry of his
pen, and silently tell us of his Christian piety. Among those remarkable for
their bulk, it is pleasurable to observe a copy of the Holy Scriptures, which
was doubtless a comfort to the venerable prior in the last days of his green
old age; and which probably guided him in the even tenor of that devout
and religious life, for which he was so esteemed by the monks of Evesham.
He possessed also some works of Bernard Augustin, and Boethius, whose
Consolation of Philosophy few book-collectors of the middle ages were without.
To many of the books the prices he gave for them, or at which they were then
valued, are affixed: a Summa Praedicantiumis valued at eight marks, and
a Burley super Politices at seven marks. We may suspect monk Nicholas of
being rather a curious collector in his way, for we find in his library some
interesting volumes of popular literature. He probably found much pleasure in
perusing his copy of the marvelous tale of “Beufys of Hampton”, and the
romantic “Mort d'Arthur”, both sufficiently interesting to relieve the
monotonous vigils of the monastery. But I must not dwell longer on the monastic
bibliophiles of Evesham, other libraries and bookworms call for some notice
from my pen.
CHAPTER IX
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 controversial 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”.
Malmsbury
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 pries’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; whoever 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.
CHAPTER X
Winchester famous for its Scribes.
In the olden time the monks of Winchester were
renowned for their calligraphic and pictorial art (those learned in such
matters refer the foundation of Winchester cathedral and monastery to a remote
period. An old writer says that it was “built by King Lucius, who, abolishing
Paganisme, embraced Christ the first yere of his reigne, being the yeere of our
Lord 180”). The choice book collectors of the day sought anxiously for volumes
produced by these ingenious scribes, and paid extravagant prices for them. A
superb specimen of their skill was executed for Bishop Ethelwold; that
enlightened and benevolent prelate was a great patron of art and literature,
and himself a grammaticus and poet of no mean pretensions. He did more
than any other of his time to restore the architectural beauties which were
damaged or destroyed by the fire and sword of the Danish invaders. His love of
these undertakings, his industry in carrying them out, and the great talent he
displayed in their restoration, is truly wonderful to observe. He is called by
Wolstan, his biographer, “a great builder of churches, and divers other works”.
He was fond of learning, and very liberal in diffusing the knowledge which he
acquired; and used to instruct the young by reading to them the Latin authors,
translated into the Saxon tongue. “He wrote a Saxion version of the Rule of
Saint Benedict, which was so much admired, and so pleased King Edgar, that he
granted to him the manor of Sudborn, as a token of his approbation”.
Ethelwold and Godemann.
Among a number of donations which he bequeathed to
this monastery, twenty volumes are enumerated, embracing some writings of Bede
and Isidore. As a proof of his bibliomanical propensities, I refer the reader
to the celebrated Benedictional of the Duke of Devonshire; that rich gem, with
its resplendent illuminations, place it beyond the shadow of a doubt, and prove
Ethelwold to have been an amator librorum of consummate taste. This fine
specimen of Saxon ingenuity is the production of a cloistered monk of
Winchester, named Godemann, who transcribed it at the bishop's special desire,
as we learn, from the following lines:—
“Presentem Biblum iusset prescribere Presul.
Wintoniæ Dus que fecerat esse
Patronum Magnus Æthelwoldus.”
Godemann, the scribe, entreats the prayers of his
readers, and wishes “all who gaze on this book to ever pray that after the end
of the flesh I may inherit health in heaven: this is the fervent prayer of the
scribe, the humble Godemann”. This talented illuminator was chaplain to
Ethelwold, and afterwards abbot of Thorney. The choice Benedictional in the
public library of Rouen is also ascribed to his elegant pen, and adds additional
lustre of his artistic fame.
Most readers have heard of Walter, (who was prior of
St. Swithin in 1174), giving twelve measures of barley and a pall, on which was
embroidered in silver the history of St. Berinus converting a Saxon king, for a
fine copy of Bede’s Homilies and St. Austin’s Psalter; and of Henry, a monk of
the Benedictine Abbey of Hyde, near there, who transcribed, in the year 1178,
Terence, Boethius, Seutonius and Claudian; and richly illuminated and bound
them, which he exchanged with a neighboring bibliophile for a life of St.
Christopher, St. Gregory's Pastoral Care, and four Missals. Nicholas, Bishop of
Winchester, left one hundred marks and a Bible, with a fine gloss, in two large
volumes, to the convent of St. Swithin. John de Pontissara, who succeeded that
bishop in the year 1282, borrowed this valuable manuscript to benefit and
improve his biblical knowledge by a perusal of its numerous notes. So great was
their regard for this precious gift, that the monks demanded a bond for its return;
a circumstance which has caused some doubt as to the plenitude of the Holy
Scriptures in the English Church during that period; at least among those who
have only casually glanced at the subject. I may as well notice that the
ancient Psalter in the Cottonian Library was written about the year 1035, by
the “most humble brother and monk Ælsinus”, of Hyde Abbey. The table prefixed
to the volume records the deaths of other eminent scribes and illuminators,
whose names are mingled with the great men of the day; showing how esteemed
they were, and how honorable was their avocation. Thus under the 15th of May we
find “Obitus Ætherici mº picto”; and again, under the 5th of July, “Obit
Wulfrici mº pictoris”. Many were the choice transcripts made and adorned by
the Winchester monks.
Library of the Monastery of Reading.
The monastery of Reading, in Berkshire, possessed
during the reign of Henry the Third a choice library of a hundred and fifty
volumes. It is printed in the Supplement to the History of Reading, from the
original prefixed to the Woollascot manuscripts. But it is copied very
inaccurately, and with many grievous omissions; nevertheless it will suffice to
enable us to gain a knowledge of the class of books most admired by the monks
of Reading; and the Christian reader will be glad to learn that the catalogue
opens, as usual, with the Holy Scriptures. Indeed no less than four fine large
and complete copies of the Bible are enumerated. The first in two volumes; the
second in three volumes; the third in two, and the fourth in the same number
which was transcribed by the Cantor, and kept in the cloisters for the use of
the monks. But in addition to these, which are in themselves quite sufficient
to exculpate the monks from any charge of negligence of Bible reading, we find
a long list of separate portions of the Old and New Testament; besides many of
the most important works of the Fathers, and productions of mediæval learning,
as the following names will testify:—
· Ambrose.
· Augustine.
· Basil.
· Bede.
· Cassidorus.
· Eusebius.
· Gregory.
· Hilarius.
· Jerome.
· Josephus.
· Lombard.
· Macrobius.
· Origen.
· Plato.
· Prosper.
· Rabanus
Maurus.
They possessed also the works of Geoffry of Monmouth;
the Vita Karoli et Alexandri et gesta Normannorum; a Ystoria Rading,
and many others equally interesting; and among the books given by Radbert of
Witchir, we find a Juvenal, the Bucolics and Georgics of Virgil, and the Ode
et Poetria et Sermone et Epistole Oratii. But certainly the most striking
characteristic is the fine biblical collection contained in their library,
which is well worthy our attention, if not our admiration: not but that we find
them in other libraries much less extensive. In those monasteries whose poverty
would not allow the purchase of books in any quantity, and whose libraries
could boast but of some twenty or thirty volumes, it is scarcely to be expected
that they should be found rich in profane literature; but it is deeply
gratifying to find, as we generally do, the Bible first on their little list;
conveying a proof by this prominence, in a quiet but expressive way, how highly
they esteemed that holy volume, and how essential they deemed its possession.
Would that they had profited more by its holy precepts!
We find an instance of this, and a proof of their
fondness for the Bible, in the catalogue of the books in Depying Priory, in
Lincolnshire; which, containing a collection of twenty-three volumes,
enumerates a copy of the Bible first on the humble list. The catalogue is as
follows:—
· These are the books in the library of the monks
of Depying.
· The Bible.
· The first part of the Morals of Pope St.
Gregory.
· The second part of the Morals by the same.
· Book of Divine Offices.
· Gesta Britonorum.
· Tracts of Robert, Bishop of Lincoln, on
Confession, with other compilations.
· Martyrologium, with the Rules of St. Benedict;
Passion of St. James, with other books.
· Constitutions of Pope Benedict.
· History of the Island of Ely.
· Hugucio de dono fratris Johannis Tiryngham.
· Homilies of the blessed Gregory.
· Constitutions of Pope Clement XII.
· Book of the Virtues and Vices.
· Majester Historiarum.
· Sacramentary given by Master John Swarby,
Rector of the Church of St. Guthlac.
· One great Portoforium for the use of the
Brothers.
· Two ditto.
· Two Psalters for the use of the Brothers.
· Three Missals for the use of the Brothers.
There is not much in this scanty collection, the loss
of which we need lament; nor does it inspire us with a very high notion of the
learning of the monks of Depying Priory. Yet how cheering it is to find that
the Bible was studied in this little cell; and I trust the monk often drew from
it many words of comfort and consolation. Where is the reader who will not
regard these instances of Bible reading with pleasure? Where is the Christian
who will not rejoice that the Gospel of Christ was read and loved in the
turbulent days of the Norman monarchs? Where is the philosopher who will affirm
that we owe nothing to this silent but effectual and fervent study? Where is he
who will maintain that the influence of the blessed and abundant charity—the
cheering promises, and the sweet admonitions of love and mercy with which the
Gospels overflow—aided nothing in the progress of civilization? Where is the
Bible student who will believe that all this reading of the Scriptures was
unprofitable because, forsooth, a monk preached and taught it to the multitude?
Let the historian open his volumes with a new
interest, and ponder over their pages with a fresh spirit of inquiry; let him
read of days of darkness and barbarity; and as he peruses on, trace the origin
of the light whose brightness drove the darkness and barbarity away. How much
will he trace to the Bible’s influence; how often will he be compelled to enter
a convent wall to find in the gospel student the one who shone as a redeeming
light in those old days of iniquity and sin; and will he deny to the Christian
priest his gratitude and love, because he wore the cowl and mantle of a monk,
or because he loved to read of saints whose lives were mingled with lying
legends, or because he chose a life which to us looks dreary, cold, and
heartless. Will he deny him a grateful recollection when he reads of how much
good he was permitted to achieve in the Church of Christ; of how many a
doubting heart he reassured; of how many a soul he fired with a true spark of
Christian love; when he reads of how the monk preached the faith of Christ, and
how often he led some wandering pilgrim into the path of vital truth by the
sweet words of the dear religion which he taught; when he reads that the hearts
of many a Norman chief was softened by the sweetness of the gospel's voice, and
his evil passions were lulled by the hymn of praise which the monk devoutly
sang to his Master in heaven above. But speaking of the existence of the Bible
among the monks puts me in mind of the Abbey of Ramsey and its fine old library
of books, which was particularly rich in biblical treasures. Even superior to
Reading, as regards its biblical collection, was the library of Ramsey. A
portion of an old catalogue of the library of this monastery has been
preserved, apparently transcribed about the beginning of the fourteenth
century, during the warlike reign of Richard the Second. It is one of the
richest and most interesting relics of its kind extant, at least of those to be
found in our own public libraries; and a perusal of it will not fail to leave
an impression on the mind that the monks were far wealthier in their literary
stores than we previously imagined. Originally on two or three skins, it is now
torn into five separate pieces, and in other respects much dilapidated. The
writing also in some parts is nearly obliterated, so as to render the document
scarcely readable. It is much to be regretted that this interesting catalogue
is but a portion of the original; in its complete form it would probably have
described twice as many volumes; but a fragment as it is, it nevertheless
contains the titles of more than eleven hundred books, with the names of many
of their donors attached. A creditable and right worthy testimonial this, of
the learning and love of books prevalent among the monks of Ramsey Monastery.
More than seven hundred of this goodly number were of a miscellaneous nature,
and the rest were principally books used in the performance of divine service.
Among these there were no less than seventy Breviaries; thirty-two Grails;
twenty-nine Processionals; and one hundred Psalters! The reader will regard
most of these as superstitious and useless; nor should I remark upon them did
they not show that books were not so scarce in those times as we suppose; as
this prodigality satisfactorily proves, and moreover testifies to the unceasing
industry of the monkish scribes. We who are used to the speed of the printing
press and its fertile abundance can form an opinion of the labor necessary to
transcribe this formidable array of papistical literature. Four hundred volumes
transcribed with the plodding pen! each word collated and each page diligently
revised, lest a blunder or a misspelt syllable should blemish those books so
deeply venerated. What long years of dry tedious labor and monotonous industry
was here!
But the other portion of the catalogue fully
compensates for this vast proportion of ecclesiastical volumes. Besides several Biblia optima in duobus voluminibus, or complete copies of the
Bible, many separate books of the inspired writers are noted down; indeed the
catalogue lays before us a superb array of fine biblical treasures, rendered
doubly valuable by copious and useful glossaries; and embracing many a rare
Hebrew MS. Bible, bibliotheca hebraice, and precious commentary. I count
no less than twenty volumes in this ancient language. But we often find Hebrew
manuscripts in the monastic catalogues after the eleventh century. The Jews,
who came over in great numbers about that time, were possessed of many valuable
books, and spread a knowledge of their language and literature among the
students of the monasteries. And when the cruel persecution commenced against
them in the thirteenth century, they disposed of their books, which were
generally bought up by the monks, who were ever hungry after such acquisitions.
Gregory, prior of Ramsey, collected a great quantity of Hebrew MSS. in this
way, and highly esteemed the language, in which he became deeply learned. At
his death, in the year 1250, he left them to the library of his monastery. Nor
was my lord prior a solitary instance; many others of the same abbey, inspired
by his example and aided by his books, studied the Hebrew with equal success.
Brother Dodford, the Armarian, and Holbeach, a monk, displayed their erudition
in writing a Hebrew lexicon.
Catalogue of Ramsey Library.
The library of Ramsey was also remarkably rich in
patristic lore. They gloried in the possession of the works of Ambrose,
Augustine, Anselm, Basil, Boniface, Bernard, Gregory, and many others equally
voluminous. But it was not exclusively to the study of such matters that these
monks applied their minds, they possessed a taste for other branches of
literature besides. They read histories of the church, histories of England, of
Normandy, of the Jews; and histories of scholastic philosophy, and many old
chronicles which reposed on their shelves. In science they appear to have been
equally studious, for the catalogue enumerates works on medicine, natural
history, philosophy, mathematics, logic, dialects, arithmetic and music! Who
will say after this that the monks were ignorant of the sciences and careless
of the arts? The classical student has perhaps ere this condemned them for
their want of taste, and felt indignant at the absence of those authors of
antiquity whose names and works he venerates. But the monks, far from
neglecting those precious volumes, were ever careful of their preservation;
they loved Virgil, Horace, and even Ovid, “heathen dogs” as they were, and
enjoyed a keen relish for their beauties. I find in this catalogue the
following choice names of antiquity occur repeatedly:—
· Aristotle.
· Arian.
· Boethius.
· Claudius.
· Dionysius.
· Donatus.
· Horace.
· Josephus.
· Justin.
· Lucan.
· Martial.
· Macrobius.
· Orosius.
· Ovid.
· Plato.
· Priscian.
· Prudentius.
· Seneca.
· Sallust.
· Solinus.
· Terence.
· Virgil.
St. Edmund's Bury
Here were rich mines of ancient eloquence, and
fragrant flowers of poesy to enliven and perfume the dull cloister studies of
the monks. It is not every library or reading society even of our own time that
possess so many gems of old. But other treasures might yet be named which still
further testify to the varied tastes and literary pursuits of these monastic
bibliophiles; but I shall content myself with naming Peter of Blois, the
Sentences of Peter Lombard, of which they had several copies, some enriched
with choice commentaries and notes, the works of Thomas Aquinas and others of
his class, a Liber Ricardi, Dictionaries, Grammars, and the writings of Majestri
Robi Grostete, the celebrated Bishop of Lincoln, renowned as a great amator
librorum and collector of Grecian literature.
I might easily swell this notice out to a considerable
extent by enumerating many other book treasures in this curious collection: but
enough has been said to enable the reader to judge of the sort of literature
the monks of Ramsey collected and the books they read; and if he should feel
inclined to pursue the inquiry further, I must refer him to the original
manuscript, promising him much gratification for his trouble. It only remains
for me to say that the Vandalism of the Reformation swept all traces of this
fine library away, save the broken, tattered catalogue we have just examined.
But this is more than has been spared from some.
The abbey of St. Edmunds Bury at one time must have
enjoyed a copious library, but we have no catalogue that I am aware of to tell
of its nature, not even a passing notice of its well-stored shelves, except a
few lines in which Leland mentions some of the old manuscripts he found therein
(in the year 1327, the inhabitants of Bury besieged the abbey, wounded the
monks, and “bare out of the abbey all the gold, silver ornaments, bookes,
charters, and other writings”. But a catalogue of their library in the
flourishing days of their monastery would have disclosed, I imagine, many
curious works, and probably some singular writings on the “crafft off medycyne”,
which Abbot Baldwin, “phesean” to Edward the Confessor, had given the monks,
and of whom Lydgate thus speaks—
“Baldewynus, a monk off Seynt Denys,
Gretly expert in crafft of medycyne;
Full provydent off counsayl and right wys,
Sad off his port, functuons off doctryne;
After by grace and influence devyne,
Choose off Bury Abbot, as I reede
The thyrdde in order that did ther succeade”.
Church
of Ely.—Canute, etc.
We may equally deplore the loss of the catalogue of
the monastery of Ely, which, during the middle ages, we have every reason to
suppose possessed a library of much value and extent. This old monastery can
trace its foundation back to a remote period, and claim as its foundress,
Etheldredæ, the daughter of Anna, King of the East Angles, she was the wife of
King Ecgfrid (the youngest son of Osway, King of Northumbria; he succeeded to
the throne on the death of his father in the year 670), with whom she lived for
twelve long years, though during that time she preserved the glory of perfect
virginity, much to the annoyance of her royal spouse, who offered money and
lands to induce that illustrious virgin to waver in her resolution, but without
success. Her inflexible determination at length induced her husband to grant
her oft-repeated prayer; and in the year 673 she retired into the seclusion of
monastic life, and building the monastery of Ely, devoted her days to the
praise and glory of her heavenly King (she seems to have been principally
encouraged in this fanatical determination by Wilfrid; probably this was one of
the causes of Ecgfrid’s displeasure towards him. So highly was the purity of
the body regarded in the early Saxon church, that Aldhelm wrote a piece in its
praise, in imitation of the style of Sedulius, but in most extravagant terms.
Bede wrote a poem, solely to commemorate the chastety of Etheldreda: “Let Maro
wars in loftier numbers sing
I sound the praises of our heavenly King;
Chaste is my verse, nor Helen's rape I write,
Light tales like these, but prove the mind as
light"). Her pure and pious life caused others speedily to follow her
example, and she soon became the virgin-mother of a numerous progeny dedicated
to God. A series of astounding miracles attended her monastic life; and sixteen
years after her death, when her sister, the succeeding abbess, opened her
wooden coffin to transfer her body to a more costly one of marble, that
"holy virgin and spouse of Christ" was found entirely free from
corruption or decay.
A nunnery, glorying in so pure a foundress, grew and
flourished, and for "two hundred years existed in the full observance of
monastic discipline;" but on the coming of the Danes in the year 870,
those sad destroyers of religious establishments laid it in a heap of ruins, in
which desolate condition it remained till it attracted the attention of the
celebrated Ethelwold, who under the patronage of King Edgar restored it; and
endowing it with considerable privileges appointed Brithnoth, Prior of
Winchester, its first abbot.
Many years after, when Leoffin was abbot there, and
Canute was king, that monarch honored the monastery of Ely with his presence on
several occasions. Monkish traditions say, that on one of these visits as the
king approached, he heard the pious inmates of the monastery chanting their
hymn of praise; and so melodious were the voices of the devotees, that his
royal heart was touched, and he poured forth his feelings in a Saxon ballad,
commencing thus:
“Merry sang the monks of Ely,
When Canute the king was sailing by;
Row ye knights near the land,
And let us hear these monks song”.
It reads smoother in Strutt's version; he renders it
“Cheerful sang the monk of Ely,
When Canute the king was passing by;
Row to the shore knights, said the king,
And let us hear these churchmen sing”.
In addition to the title of a poet, Canute has also
received the appellation of a bibliomaniac. Dibdin, in his bibliomania,
mentions in a cursory manner a few monkish book collectors, and introduces
Canute among them. The illuminated manuscript of the four Gospels in the Danish
tongue, now in the British Museum, he writes, “and once that monarch's own book
leaves not the shadow of a doubt of his bibliomanical character!”. I cannot
however allow him that title upon such equivocal grounds; for upon examination,
the MS. turns out to be in the Theotisc dialect, possessing no illuminations of
its own, and never perhaps once in the hands of the royal poet.
From the account books of Ely church we may infer that
the monks there enjoyed a tolerable library; for we find frequent entries of
money having been expended for books and materials connected with the library;
thus in the year 1300 we find that they bought at one time five dozen
parchment, four pounds of ink, eight calf and four sheep-skins for binding
books; and afterwards there is another entry of five dozen vellum and six pair
of book clasps, a book of decretals for the library, 3s., a Speculum Gregor,
2s., and “Pro tabula Paschalis fac denova et illuminand”, 4s. They
frequently perhaps sent one of the monks to distants parts to purchase or
borrow books for their library; a curious instance of this occurs under the
year 1329, when they paid “the precentor for going to Balsham to enquire for
books, 6s. 7d.” The bookbinder two weeks’ wages, 4s.; twelve iron chains to
fasten books, 4s.; five dozen vellum, 25s. 8d. In the year 1396, they paid
their librarian 53s. 4d., and a tunic for his services during one year.
Nigel, Bishop of Ely, by endowing the Scriptorium,
enabled the monks to produce some excellent transcripts; they added several
books of Cassiodorus, Bede, Aldelem, Radbert, Andres, etc., to the library;and
they possessed at one time no less than thirteen fine copies of the Gospels,
which were beautifully
CHAPTER XI
St. Alban’s. Willigod. Bones of St. Alban. Eadmer
The efficacy of Good Works was a
principle ever inculcated by the monks of old. It is sad to reflect, that vile
deeds and black intentions were too readily forgiven and absolved by the Church
on the performance of some good deed; or that the monks should dare to shelter
or to gloss over those sins which their priestly duty bound them to condemn,
because forsooth some wealthy baron could spare a portion of his broad lands or
coffered gold to extenuate them. But this forms one of the dark stains of the
monastic system; and the monks, I am sorry to say, were more readily inclined
to overlook the blemish, because it proved so profitable to their order. And
thus it was, that the proud and noble monastery of St. Alban's was endowed by a
murderer's hand, and built to allay the fierce tortures of an assassin’s
conscience. Ethelbert, king of the East Angles, fell by the regal hand of Offa,
king of Mercia; and from the era of that black and guilty deed many a fine
monastery dates its origin and owes its birth.
St. Alban’s was founded, as its name implies, in honor
of the English protomartyr, whose bones were said to have been discovered on
that interesting site, and afterwards preserved with veneration in the abbey.
In the ancient times, the building appears to have covered a considerable
space, and to have been of great magnitude and power; for ruins of its former
structure mark how far and wide the foundation spreads.
“The glorious king Offa”, as the monks in their
adulation style him, richly endowed the monastery on its completion, as we
learn from the old chronicles of the abbey; and a succession of potent
sovereigns are emblazoned on the glittering parchment, whose liberality
augmented or confirmed these privileges.
Willigod, the first abbot, greatly enriched the
monastery, and bestowed especial care upon the relics of St. Alban. It is
curious to mark how many perils those shriveled bones escaped, and with what
anxious care the monks preserved them. In the year 930, during the time of
Abbot Eadfrid, the Danes attacked the abbey, and after many destroying acts broke
open the repository, and carried away some of the bones of St. Alban into their
own country. The monks took greater care than ever of the remaining relics; and
their anxiety for their safety, and the veneration with which they regarded
them, is curiously illustrated by an anecdote of Abbot Leofric, elected in the
year 1006. His abbacy was, therefore, held in troubled times; and in the midst
of fresh invasions and Danish cruelties. Fearing lest they should a second time
reach the abbey, he determined to protect by stratagem what he could not effect
by force. After hiding the genuine bones of St. Alban in a place quite secure
from discovery, he sent an open message to the Abbot of Ely, entreating
permission to deposit the holy relics in his keeping; and offering, as a
plausible reason, that the monastery of Ely, being surrounded by marshy and
impenetrable bogs, was secure from the approaches of the barbarians. He
accompanied this message with some false relics—the remains of an old monk
belonging to the abbey enclosed in a coffin—and sent with them a worn
antiquated looking mantle, pretending that it formerly belonged to Amphibalus,
the master of St. Alban. The monks of Ely joyfully received these precious
bones, and displayed perhaps too much eagerness in doing so. Certain it is,
that when the danger was past and the quietude of the country was restored,
Leofric, on applying for the restitution of these “holy relics”, found some
difficulty in obtaining them; for the Abbot of Ely attempted by equivocation and
duplicity to retain them. After several ineffectual applications, Leofric was
compelled, for the honor of his monastery, to declare the “pious fraud” he had
practised; which he proved by the testimony of several monks of his fraternity,
who were witnesses of the transaction. It is said, that Edward the Confessor
was highly incensed at the conduct of the Abbot of Ely.
Norman Conquest. Paul and the Scriptorium
I have stated elsewhere, that the learned and pious
Ælfric gave the monastery many choice volumes. His successor, Ealdred, abbot,
about the year 955, was quite an antiquary in his way; and no spot in England
afforded so many opportunities to gratify his taste as the site of the ancient
city of Verulam. He commenced an extensive search among the ruins, and rescued
from the earth a vast quantity of interesting and valuable remains. He stowed
all the stone-work and other materials which were serviceable in building away,
intending to erect a new edifice for the monks: but death prevented the
consummation of these designs. Eadmer, his successor, a man of great piety and
learning, followed up the pursuit, and made some important accessions to these
stores. He found also a great number of gold and silver ornaments, specimens of
ancient art, some of them of a most costly nature, but being idols or figures
connected with heathen mythology, he cared not to preserve them. Matthew Paris
is prolix in his account of the operations and discoveries of this abbot; and
one portion of it is so interesting, and seems so connected with our subject,
that I cannot refrain from giving it to the reader.
“The abbot”, he writes, “whilst digging out the walls
and searching for the ruins which were buried in the earth in the midst of the
ancient city, discovered many vestiges of the foundation of a great palace. In
a recess in one of the walls he found the remains of a library, consisting of a
number of books and rolls; and among them a volume in an unknown tongue, and
which, although very ancient, had especially escaped destruction. This nobody
in the monastery could read, nor could they at that time find anyone who
understood the writing or the idiom; it was exceedingly ancient, and the
letters evidently were most beautifully formed; the inscriptions or titles were
written in gold, and encircled with ornaments; bound in oak with silken bands,
which still retained their strength and beauty; so perfectly was the volume
preserved. But they could not conceive what the book was about; at last, after
much search and diligent inquiry, they found a very feeble and aged priest,
named Unwon, who was very learned in writings literis bene eruditum,
and imbued with the knowledge of divers languages. He knew directly what the
volume was about, and clearly and fluently read the contents; he also explained
the other Codices found in the same library in eodem Almariolo of the
palace with the greatest ease, and showed them to be written in the characters
formerly in use among the inhabitants of Verulam, and in the language of the
ancient Britons.
Some, however, were in Latin; but the book
before-mentioned was found to be the history of Saint Alban, the English
proto-martyr, according to that mentioned by Bede, as having been daily used in
the church. Among the other books were discovered many contrivances for the
invocation and idolatrous rites of the people of Verulam, in which it was
evident that Phœbus the god Sol was especially invoked and worshipped; and
after him Mercury, called in English Woden, who was the god of the merchants.
The books which contained these diabolical inventions they cast away and burnt;
but that precious treasure, the history of Saint Alban, they preserved, and the
priest before-mentioned was appointed to translate the ancient English or
British into the vulgar tongue. By the prudence of the Abbot Eadmer, the
brothers of the convent made a faithful copy, and diligently explained it in
their public teaching; they also translated it into Latin, in which it is now
known and read; the historian adds that the ancient and original copy, which
was so curiously written, instantaneously crumbled into dust and was destroyed
for ever”.
Although the attention of the Saxon abbots was
especially directed to literary matters, and to the affairs connected with the
making of books, we find no definite mention of a Scriptorium, or of
manuscripts having been transcribed as a regular and systematic duty, till
after the Norman conquest. That event happened during the abbacy of Frederic,
and was one which greatly influenced the learning of the monks. Indeed, I
regard the Norman conquest as a most propitious event for English literature,
and one which wrought a vast change in the aspect of monastic learning; the
student of those times cannot fail to perceive the revolution which then took
place in the cloisters; visibly accomplished by the installation of Norman
bishops and the importation of Norman monks, who in the well-regulated
monasteries of France and Normandy had been initiated into a more general
course of study, and brought up in a better system of mental training than was
known here at that time.
But poor Frederic, a conscientious and worthy monk,
suffered severely by that event, and was ultimately obliged to seek refuge in
the monastery of Ely to evade the displeasure of the new sovereign; but his
earthly course was well-nigh run, for three days after, death released him from
his worldly troubles, and deprived the conqueror of a victim. Paul, the first
of the Norman abbots, was appointed by the king in the year 1077. He was
zealous and industrious in the interest of the abbey, and obtained the
restitution of many lands and possessions of which it had been deprived; he
rebuilt the old and almost ruined church, and employed for that purpose many of
the materials which his predecessors had collected from the ruins of Verulam;
and even now, I believe, some remnants of these Roman tiles, etc., may be
discerned. He moreover obtained many important grants and valuable donations;
among others a layman named Robert, one of the Norman leaders, gave him two
parts of the tithes of his domain at Hatfield, which he had received from the
king at the distribution.
“This he assigned”, says Matthew Paris, “to the
disposal of Abbot Paul, who was a lover of the Scriptures, for the transcription
of the necessary volumes for the monastery. He himself indeed was a learned
soldier, and a diligent hearer and lover of Scripture”; to this he also added
the tithes of Redburn, appointing certain provisions to be given to the
scribes; this he did out of charity to the brothers that they may not thereby
suffer, and that no impediment might be offered to the writers. The abbot
thereupon sought and obtained from afar many renowned scribes, to write the
necessary books for the monastery. And in return for these abundant favors, he
presented, as a suitable gift to the warlike Robert, for the chapel in his
palace at Hatfield, two pair of vestments, a silver cup, a missal, and the
other needful books (missale cum aliis libris necessariis). Having thus
presented to him the first volumes produced by his liberality, he proceeded to
construct a scriptorium, which was set apart (præelectos) for the
transcription of books; Lanfranc supplied the copies. They thus procured for
the monastery twenty-eight notable volumes (volumina notabilia), also
eight psalters, a book of collects, a book of epistles, a volume containing the
gospels for the year, two copies of the gospels complete, bound in gold and
silver, and ornamented with gems; besides ordinals, constitutions, missals,
collects, and other books for the use of the library”.
Thus blessed, we find the monks of St. Albans for ages
after constantly acquiring fresh treasures, and multiplying their book stores
by fruitful transcripts. There is scarce an abbot, whose portrait garnishes the
fair manuscript before me, that is not represented with some goodly tomes
spread around him, or who is not mentioned as a choice amator librorum,
in these monkish pages. It is a singular circumstance, when we consider how
bookless those ages are supposed to have been, that the illuminated portraits
of the monks are most frequently depicted with some ponderous volume before
them, as if the idea of a monk and the study of a book were quite inseparable.
During my search among the old manuscripts quoted in this work, this fact has
been so repeatedly forced upon my attention that I am tempted to regard it as
an important hint, and one which speaks favorably for the love of books and
learning among the cowled devotees of the monasteries.
Geoffry de Gorham.
Passing Richard de Albani, who gave them a copy of the
gospels, a missal written in letters of gold, another precious volumes whose
titles are unrecorded, we come to Geoffry, a native of Gorham, who was elected
abbot in the year 1119. He had been invited over to England (before he became a
priest) by his predecessor, to superintend the school of St. Albans; but he
delayed the voyage so long, that on his arrival he found the appointment
already filled; on this he went to Dunstable, where he read lectures, and
obtained some pupils. It was during his stay there that he wrote the piece
which has obtained for him so much reputation. Ubi quendam ludum de
Sancta Katarinæ quem miracula vulgariter appellamus fecit, says the Cotton
manuscripts, on the vellum page of which he is portrayed in the act of writing
it. Geoffry, from this passage, is supposed to be the first author of dramatic
literature in England; although the title seems somewhat equivocal, from the
casual manner in which his famous play of St. Catherine is thus mentioned by
Matthew Paris. Of its merits we are still less able to form an opinion; for
nothing more than the name of that much talked of miracle play has been
preserved. We may conclude, however, that it was performed with all the paraphernalia
of scenery and characteristic costume; for he borrowed of the sacrist of St.
Albans some copes for this purpose. On the night following the representation
the house in which he resided was burnt; and, says the historian, all his
books, and the copes he had borrowed were destroyed. Rendered poor indeed by
this calamity, and somewhat reflecting upon himself for the event, he assumed
in sorrow and despair the religious habit, and entered the monastery of St.
Albans; where by his deep study, his learning and his piety, he so gained the
hearts of his fraternity, that he ultimately became their abbot. He is said to
have been very industrious in the transcription of books; and he “made a missal
bound in gold, auro ridimitum, and another in two volumes; both incomparably
illuminated in gold, and written in a clear and legible hand; also a precious
Psalter similarly illuminated; a book containing the Benedictions and the
Sacraments; a book of Exorcisms, and a Collectaria”.
Geoffry was succeeded by Ralph de Gobiumin the year
1143: he was a monk remarkable for his learning and his bibliomanical pursuits.
He formerly remained some time in the services of Alexander, bishop of Lincoln,
and gained the esteem of that prelate. His book-loving passion arose from
hearing one “Master Wodon, of Italy, expound the doctrines of the Holy
Scriptures”. He from that time became a most enthusiastic amator
librorum; and collected, with great diligence, an abundant multitude of
books.
The matters in which he was concerned, his donations
to the monastery, and the anecdotes of his life, are all unconnected with my
subject; so that I am obliged to pass from this interesting monk, an undoubted
bibliophile, from sheer want of information. I cannot but regret that the
historian does not inform us more fully of his book collecting pursuits; but he
is especially barren on that subject, although he highly esteems him for
prosecuting that pleasing avocation. He died in the year 1151, in the
fourteenth of King Stephen, and was followed by Robert de Gorham, who is also
commemorated as a bibliophile in the pages of the Cotton manuscripts; and to
judge from his portrait, and the intensity with which he pores over his volume,
he was a hard and devoted student. He ordered the scribes to make a great many
books; indeed, adds Paris the historian, who was himself somewhat of an amator
librorum, “more by far than can be mentioned”. From another source we learn
that these books were most sumptuously bound.
During the days of this learned abbot a devout and
humble clerk asked admission at the abbey gate. Aspiring to a holy life, he
ardently hoped, by thus spending his days in monastic seclusion, to render his
heart more acceptable to God. Hearing his prayer, the monks conducted him into
the presence of my Lord Abbot, who received him with compassionate tenderness,
and kindly questioned him as to his qualifications for the duties and sacred
responsibilities of the monkish priesthood; for even in those dark ages they
looked a little into the learning of the applicant before he was admitted into
their fraternity. But alas! the poor clerk was found woefully deficient in this
respect, and was incapable of replying to the questions of my Lord Abbot, who
thereupon gently answered, “My son, tarry awhile, and still exercise thyself in
study, and so become more perfect for the holy office”.
Abashed and disappointed, he retired with a kindling
blush of shame; and deeming this temporary repulse a positive refusal he left
his fatherland, and started on a pilgrimage to France. And who was this poor,
humble, unlettered clerk? Who this simple layman, whose ignorance rendered him
an unfit socius for the plodding monks of old St. Albans
Abbey? No less than the English born Nicholas Brekespere, afterwards his
Holiness Adrian IV, Pope of Rome, Vicar-apostolic and successor of St. Peter!
Yes; still bearing in mind the kind yet keen reproof
of the English abbot, on his arrival in a foreign land he studied with all the
depth and intensity of despair, and soon surpassed his companions in the
pursuit of knowledge; and became so renowned for learning, and for his
prudence, that he was made Canon of St. Rufus. His sagacity, moreover, caused
him to be chosen, on three separate occasions, to undertake some important
embassies to the apostolic see; and at length he was elected a cardinal. So
step by step he finally became elevated to the high dignity of the popedom. The
first and last of England’s sons who held the keys of Peter.
These shadows of the past—these shreds of a forgotten
age—these echoes of five hundred years, are full of interest and instruction.
For where shall we find a finer example—a more cheering instance of what
perseverance will accomplish—or a more satisfactory result of the pursuit of
knowledge under difficulties? Not only may these curious facts cheer the dull
student now, and inspire him with that energy so essential to success, but
these whisperings of old may serve as lessons for ages yet to come. For if we
look back upon those dark days with such feelings of superiority, may not the
wiser generations of the future regard us with a still more contemptuous, yet
curious eye? And when they look back at our Franklins, and our Johnsons, in
astonishment at such fine instances of what perseverance could do, and what
energy and plodding industry could accomplish, even when surrounded with the
difficulties of our ignorance; how much more will they praise this bright
example, in the dark background of the historical tableaux, who, without even
our means of obtaining knowledge—our libraries or our talent—rose by patient,
hard and devoted study, from Brekespere the humble clerk—the rejected of St.
Albans—to the proud title of Vicar-apostolic of Christ and Pope of Rome!
Abbot Simon and his “multis voluminibus”
Simon, an Englishman, a clerk and a “man of letters
and good morals”, was elected abbot in the year 1167. All my authorities concur
in bestowing upon him the honor and praise appertaining to a bibliomaniac. He
was, says one, an especial lover of books, librorum amator speciales:
and another in panegyric terms still further dubs him an amator
scripturarum. All this he proved, and well earned the distinction, by the
great encouragement he gave to the collecting and transcribing of books. The
monkish pens he found moving too slow, and yielding less fruit than formerly.
He soon, however, set them hard at work again; and to facilitate their labors,
he added materially to the comforts of the Scriptorium by repairing and
enlarging it; “and always”, says the monk from whom I learn this, “kept two or
three most choice scribes in the Camera (Scriptorium,) who sustained its
reputation, and from whence an abundant supply of the most excellent books were
continually produced. He framed some efficient laws for its management, and
ordered that, in subsequent times, every abbot should keep and support one able
scribe at least. Among the many choice books and authentic volumes, volumina
authentica, which he by this care and industry added to the abbey library,
was included a splendid copy of the Old and New Testament, transcribed with
great accuracy and beautifully written—indeed, says the manuscript history of
that monastery, so noble a copy was nowhere else to be seen. But besides this,
Abbot Simon gave them all those precious books which he had been for a long
time collecting himself at great cost and patient labor, and having bound them
in a sumptuous and marvelous manner, he made a library for their reception near
the tomb of Roger the Hermit. He also bestowed many rich ornaments and much
costly plate on the monastery; and by a long catalogue of good deeds, too ample
to be inserted here, he gained the affections and gratitude of his fraternity,
who loudly praised his virtues and lamented his loss when they laid him in his
costly tomb. There is a curious illumination of this monkish bibliophile in the
Cotton manuscript. He is represented deeply engaged with his studies amidst a number
of massy volumes, and a huge trunk is there before him crammed with rough old
fashioned large clasped tomes, quite enticing to look upon”.
After Simon came Garinus, who was soon succeeded by
one John. Our attention is arrested by the learned renown of this abbot, who
had studied in his youth at Paris, and obtained the unanimous praise of his
masters for his assiduous attention and studious industry. He returned with
these high honors, and was esteemed in grammar a Priscian, in poetry an Ovid,
and in physic equal to Galen. With such literary qualifications, it was to be
expected the Scriptorium would flourish under his government, and the library
increase under his fostering care. Our expectations are not disappointed; for
many valuable additions were made during his abbacy, and the monks over whom he
presided gave many manifestations of refinement and artistic talent, which
incline us to regard the ingenuity of the cloisters in a more favorable light.
Raymond, his prior, was a great help in all these undertakings. His industry
seems to have been unceasing in beautifying the church, and looking after the
transcription of books. With the assistance of Roger de Parco, the cellarer, he
made a large table very handsome, and partly fabricated of metal. He wrote two
copies of the Gospels, and bound them in silver and gold adorned with various
figures. Brother Walter of Colchester, with Randulph, Gubium and others,
produced some very handsome paintings comprising the evangelists and many holy
saints, and hung them up in the church. “As we have before mentioned, by the
care and industry of the lord Raymond, many noble and useful books were
transcribed and given to the monastery. The most remarkable of these was a
Historia Scholastica, with allegorics, a most elegant book—liber
elegantissimus exclaims my monkish authority". This leads me to
say something more of my lord prior, for the troubles which the conscientious
conduct of old Raymond brought upon himself—
“Implores the passing tribute of a sigh”.
Be it known then that William de Trompington succeeded
to the abbacy on the death of John; but he was a very different man, without
much esteem for learning; and thinking I am afraid far more of the world and
heaven or the Domus Dei. Alas! memoirs of bad monks and worldly
abbots are sometimes found blotting the holy pages of the monkish annals. Domus
Dei est porta cœli, said the monks; and when they closed the convent gates
they did not look back on the world again, but entered on that dull and gloomy
path with a full conviction that they were leaving all and following Christ,
and so acting in accordance with his admonitions; but those who sought the
convent to forget in its solitude their worldly cares and worldly
disappointments, too often found how futile and how ineffectual was that dismal
life to eradicate the grief of an overburdened heart, or to subdue the violence
of misguided temper. The austerity of the monastic rules might tend to conquer
passion or moderate despair, but there was little within those walls to drive
painful recollections of the outward world away; for at every interval between
their holy meditations and their monkish duties, images of the earth would
crowd back upon their minds, and wring from their ascetic hearts tributes of
anguish and despair; and so we find the writings and letters of the old monks
full of vain regrets and misanthropic thoughts, but sometimes overflowing with
the most touching pathos of human misery. Yet the monk knew full well what his
duty was, and knew how sinful it was to repine or rebel against the will of
God. If he vowed obedience to his abbot, he did not forget that obedience was
doubly due to Him; and strove with all the strength that weak humanity could
muster, to forget the darkness of the past by looking forward with a pious hope
and a lively faith to the brightness and glory of the future. By constant
prayer the monk thought more of his God, and gained help to strengthen the
faith within him; and by assiduous and devoted study he disciplined his heart
of flesh—tore from it what lingering affection for the world remained, and
deserting all love of earth and all love of kin, purged and purified it for his
holy calling, and closed its portals to render it inaccessible to all sympathy
of blood. If a thought of those shut out from him by the monastic walls stole
across his soul and mingled with his prayer, he started and trembled as if he
had offered up an unholy desire in the supplication. To him it was a proof that
his nature was not yet subdued; and a day of study and meditation, with a fast
unbroken till the rays of the morrow's sun cast their light around his little
cell, absolved the sin, and broke the tie that bound him to the world without.
Raymond the Prior
If this violence was experienced in subduing the
tenderest of human sympathy; how much more severe was the conflict of dark
passions only half subdued, or malignant depravity only partially reformed.
These dark lines of human nature were sometimes prominent, even when the monk
was clothed in sackcloth and ashes; and are markedly visible in the life of
William de Trompington. But let not the reader think that he was appointed with
the hearty suffrages of the fraternity, he was elected at the recommendation of
the “king”, a very significant term in those days of despotic rule, at which
choice became a mere farce. “Out of the fullness of the heart the mouth
speaketh”; and the monks soon began to perceive with regret and trembling the
worldly ways of the new abbot, which he could not hide even under his abbatical
robes. In a place dedicated to holy deeds and heavenly thoughts, worldly
conduct or unbridled passion strikes the mind as doubly criminal, and loads the
heart with dismay and suffering; at least so my lord Prior regarded it, whose
righteous indignation could no longer endure these manifestations of a worldly
mind. So he gently remonstrated with his superior, and hinted at the
impropriety of such conduct. This was received not in Christian fellowship, but
with haughty and passionate displeasure; and from that day the fate of poor
Raymond was irrevocably sealed. The abbot thinking to suppress the
dissatisfaction which was now becoming general and particularly inconvenient,
sent him a long distance off to the cell of Tynmouth in Northumberland, where
all were strangers to him. Nor could the tears of the old man turn the heart of
his cruel lord, nor the rebellious murmurings of the brothers avail. Thank God
such cases are not very frequent; and the reader of monkish annals will not
find many instances of such cold and unfeeling cruelty to distress his studies
or to arouse his indignation. But obedience was a matter of course in the
monastery; it was one of the most imperative duties of the monk, and if not
cheerfully he was compelled to manifest alacrity in fulfilling even the most
unpleasant mandate. But I would have forgiven this transaction on the score of
expediency perhaps, had not the abbot heaped additional insults and cruelties
upon the aged offender; but his books which he had transcribed with great
diligence and care, he forcibly deprived him of, violenter spoliatum,
and so robbed him, as his historian says, of all those things which would have
been a comfort and solace to his old age.
The books which the abbot thus became dishonestly
possessed of—for I cannot regard it in any other light—we are told he gave to
the library of the monastery; and he also presented some books to more than one
neighboring church. But he was not bookworm himself, and dwelt I suspect with
greater fondness over his wealthy rent roll than on the pages of the fine
volumes in the monastic library. The monks, however, amidst all these troubles
retained their love of books; indeed it was about this time that John de
Basingstoke, who had studied at Athens, brought a valuable collection of Greek
books into England, and greatly aided in diffusing a knowledge of that language
into this country. He was deacon of Saint Albans, and taught many of the monks
Greek; Nicholas, a chaplain there, became so proficient in it, that he was
capable of greatly assisting bishop Grostete in translating his Testament of
the twelve patriarchs into Latin.
Roger de Northone, the twenty-fourth abbot of Saint
Albans, gave “many valuable and choice books to the monastery”, and among them
the commentaries of Raymond, Godfrey, and Bernard, and a book containing the
works and discourses of Seneca. His bibliomaniacal propensities, and his
industry in transcribing books, is indicated by an illumination representing
this worthy abbot deeply engrossed with his ponderous volumes.
I have elsewhere related an anecdote of Wallingford,
abbot of St. Albans, and the sale of books effected between him and Richard de
Bury. It appears that rare and munificent collector gave many and various noble
books, multos et varios libros nobiles, to the monastery of St.
Albans whilst he was bishop of Durham. Michael de Wentmore succeeded
Wallingford, and proved a very valuable benefactor to the monastery; and by
wise regulations and economy greatly increased the comforts and good order of
the abbey. He gave many books, plures libros, to the library,
besides two excellent Bibles, one for the convent and one for the abbot's
study, and to be kept especially for his private reading; an ordinal, very
beautiful to look upon, being sumptuously bound. Indeed, so multis
voluminibus did he bestow, that he expended more than 100l. in this
way, an immense sum in those old days, when a halfpenny a day was deemed fair
wages for a scribe.
Wentmore. Whethamstede.
Wentmore was succeeded by Thomas de la Mare, a man of
singular learning, and remarkable as a patron of it in others; it was probably
by his direction that John of Tynmouth wrote his Sanctilogium Britannæ, for
that work was dedicated to him. A copy, presented by Thomas de la Mare to the
church of Redburn, is in the British Museum, much injured by fire, but
retaining at the end the following lines:
“Hunc librum dedet Dominus Thomas de la Mare, Albas
monasterii S. Albani Anglorum Proto martyris Deo et Ecclesiæ B. Amphibali de
Redburn, ut fratris indem in cursu existentus per ejus lecturam poterint
cœlestibus instrui, et per Sanctorum exempla virtutibus insignixi.”
But there are few who have obtained so much reputation
as John de Whethamstede, perhaps the most learned abbot of this monastery. He
was formerly monk of the cell at Tynmouth, and afterwards prior of Gloucester
College at Oxford, from whence he was appointed to the government of St.
Albans. Whethamstede was a passionate bibliomaniac, and when surrounded with
his books he cared little, or perhaps from the absence of mind so often
engendered by the delights of study, he too frequently forgot, the important
affairs of his monastery, and the responsible duties of an abbot; but absorbed
as he was with his studies, Whethamstede was not a mere
..... Bookful blockhead ignorantly read
With loads of learned lumber in his head.
It is true he was an inveterate reader, amorously
inclined towards vellum tomes and illuminated parchments; but he did not covet
them like some collectors for the mere pride of possessing them, but gloried in
feasting on their intellectual charms and delectable wisdom, and sought in
their attractive pages the means of becoming a better Christian and a wiser man.
But he was so excessively fond of books, and became so deeply engrossed with
his book-collecting pursuits, that it is said some of the monks showed a little
dissatisfaction at his consequent neglect of the affairs of the monastery; but
these are faults I cannot find the heart to blame him for, but am inclined to
consider his conduct fully redeemed by the valuable encouragement he gave to
literature and learning. Generous to a fault, abundant in good deeds and costly
expenditure, he became involved in pecuniary difficulties, and found that the
splendor and wealth which he had scattered so lavishly around his monastery,
and the treasures with which he had adorned the library shelves, had not only
drained his ample coffers, but left a large balance unsatisfied. Influenced by
this circumstance, and the murmurings of the monks, and perhaps too, hoping to
obtain more time for study and book-collecting, he determined to resign his
abbacy, and again become a simple brother. The proceedings relative to this
affair are curiously related by a contemporary, John of Amersham. In
Whethamstede’s address to the monks on this occasion, he thus explains his
reasons for the step he was about to take. After a touching address, wherein he
intimates his determination, he says, “Ye have known moreover how, from the
first day of my appointment even until this day, assiduously and continually
without any intermission I have shown singular solicitude in four things, to
wit, in the erection of conventual buildings, in the writing of books, in the
renewal of vestments, and in the acquisition of property. And perhaps, by
reason of this solicitude of mine, ye conceive that I have fallen into debt;
yet that you may know, learn and understand what is in this matter the certain
and plain truth, and when ye know it ye may report it unto others, know ye for
certain, yea, for most certain, that for all these things about which, and in
which I have expended money, I am not indebted to anyone living more than
10,000 marks; but that I wish freely to acknowledge this debt, and so to make
satisfaction to every creditor, that no survivor of any one in the world shall
have to demand anything from my successor”.
The monks on hearing this declaration were sorely
affected, and used every persuasion to induce my lord abbot to alter his
determination, but without success; so that they were compelled to seek another
in whom to confide the government of their abbey. Their choice fell upon John
Stokes, who presided over them for many years; but at his death the love and
respect which the brothers entertained for Whethamstede, was manifested by
unanimously electing him again, an honor which he in return could not find the
heart to decline. But during all this time, and after his restoration, he was
constantly attending to the acquisition of books, and numerous were the
transcripts made under his direction by the scribes and enriched by his
munificence, for some of the most costly copies produced in that century were
the fruits of their labor; during his time there were more volumes transcribed
than in that of any other abbot since the foundation of the abbey, says the
manuscript from whence I am gleaning these details, and adds that the number of
them exceeded eighty-seven. He commenced the transcription of the great
commentary of Nicholas de Lyra upon the whole Bible, which had then been
published some few years. Det Deus, ut in nostris felicem habere valeat
consummacionem, exclaims the monk, nor will the reader be surprised at the
expression, if he for one moment contemplates the magnitude of the undertaking.
But not only was Whethamstede remarkable as a
bibliomaniac—he claims considerable respect as an author. Some of his
productions were more esteemed in his own time than now; being compilations and
commentaries more adapted as a substitute for other books, than valuable as
original works. Under this class I am inclined to place his Granarium, a
large work in five volumes; full of miscellaneous extracts, etc., and somewhat
partaking of the encyclopediac form; his Propinarium, in two volumes,
also treating of general matters; his Pabularium and Palearium
Poetarium, and his Proverbiarium, or book of Proverbs; to which may
be added the many pieces relating to the affairs of the monastery. But far
different must we regard many of his other productions, which are more
important in a literary point of view, as calling for the exercise of a refined
and cultivated mind, and no small share of critical acumen. Among these I must
not forget to include his Chronicle, which spreading over a space of twenty
years, forms a valuable historical document. The rest are poetical narratives,
embracing an account of Jack Cade's insurrection—the battles of Ferrybridge,
Wakefield, and St. Albans.
A Cottonian manuscript contained a catalogue of the
books which this worthy abbot compiled, or which were transcribed under his
direction: unfortunately it was burnt, with many others forming part of that
inestimable collection. From another source we learn the names of some of them,
and the cost incurred in their transcription. Twenty marks were paid for
copying his Granarium, in four volumes; forty shillings for his
Palearium; the same for a Polycraticon of John of Salisbury; five pounds
for a Boethius, with a gloss; upwards of six pounds for “a book of Cato”,
enriched with a gloss and table; and four pounds for Gorham upon Luke.
Whethamstede ordered a Grael to be written so beautifully illuminated, and so
superbly bound, as to be valued at the enormous sum of twenty pounds: but let
it be remembered that my Lord Abbot was a very epicure in books, and thought a
great deal of choice bindings, tall copies, immaculate parchment, and brilliant
illuminations, and the high prices which he freely gave for these book
treasures evince how sensible he was to the joys of bibliomania; nor am I
inclined to regard the works thus attained as “mere monastic trash”.
The finest illumination in the Cotton manuscript is a
portrait of Abbot Whethamstede, which for artistic talent is far superior to
any in the volume. Eight folios are occupied with an enumeration of the “good
works” of this liberal monk: among the items we find the sum of forty pounds
having been expended on a reading desk, and four pounds for writing four
Antiphoners. He displayed also great liberality of spirit in his benefactions
to Gloucester College, at Oxford, besides great pecuniary aid. He built a
library there, and gave many valuable books for the use of the students, in
which he wrote these verses:
Fratribus Oxoniœ datur in minus liber iste,
Per patrem pecorem prothomartyris Angligenorum:
Quem si quis rapiat ad partem sive reponat,
Vel Judæ loqueum, vel
furcas sentiat; Amen.
In others he wrote—
Discior ut docti fieret nova regia plebi
Culta magisque deæ datur hic liber ara Minerva,
Hic qui diis dictis libant holocausta ministrias.
Et cirre bibulam
sitiunt præ nectare lympham,
Estque librique loci, idem datur, actor et unus.
If we estimate worth by comparison, we must award a
large proportion to this learned abbot. Living in the most corrupt age of the
monastic system, when the evils attendant on luxurious ease began to be too
obvious in the cloister, and when complaints were heard at first in a
whispering murmur, but anon in a stern loud voice of wroth and indignant
remonstrance—when in fact the progressive, inquiring spirit of the reformation
was taking root in what had hitherto been regarded as a hard, dry, stony soil.
This coming tempest, only heard as yet like the lulling of a whisper, was
nevertheless sufficiently loud to spread terror and dismay among the cowled
habitants of the monasteries. That quietude and mental ease so indispensable to
study—so requisite for the growth of thought and intellectuality, was disturbed
by these distant sounds, or dissipated by their own indolence. And yet in the
midst of all this, rendered still more anxious and perplexing by domestic
troubles and signs of discontent and insubordination among the monks. Whethamstede
found time, and what was better the spirit, for literary and bibliomanical
pursuits. Honor to the man, monk though he be, who oppressed with these
vicissitudes and cares could effect so much, and could appreciate both
literature and art.
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester.
Contemporary with him we are not surprised that he
gained the patronage and friendship of Humphrey Duke of Gloucester, to whom he
dedicated many of his own performances, and greatly aided in collecting those
treasures which the duke regarded with such esteem. It is said that noble
collector frequently paid a friendly visit to the abbey to inspect the work of
the monkish scribes, and perhaps to negotiate for some of those choice vellum
tomes for which the monks of that monastery were so renowned.
But we must not pass the “good duke” without some
slight notice of his “ryghte valiant deedes”, his domestic troubles and his
dark mysterious end. Old Foxe thus speaks of him in his Actes and Monuments:
“Of manners he seemed meeke and gentle, loving the commonwealth, a supporter of
the poore commons, of wit and wisdom, discrete and studious, well affected to
religion and a friend to verity, and no less enemy to pride and ambition,
especially in haughty prelates, which was his undoing in this present evil
world. And, which is seldom and rare in such princes of that calling, he was
both learned himself and no less given to studies, and also a singular favorer
and patron to those who were studious and learned”. To which I cannot refrain
from adding the testimony of Hollingshed, who tells us that “The ornaments of
his mind were both rare and admirable; the feats of chivalry by him commenced
and achieved valiant and fortunate; his gratuities in counsel and soundness of
policy profound and singular; all which with a train of other excellent
properties linked together, require a man of manifold gifts to advance them
according to their dignity. I refer the readers unto Maister Foxe’s booke
of Actes and Monuments. Only this I ad, that in respect of his noble
endowments and his demeanor full of decency, which he daily used, it seemed he
might well have given this pretty poesy:"
Virtute duce non sanguine nitor.
But with all these high qualities, our notions of
propriety are somewhat shocked at the open manner in which he kept his mistress
Eleanor Cobham; but we can scarcely agree in the condemnation of the generality
of historians for his marrying her afterwards, but regard it rather as the
action of an honorable man, desirous of making every reparation in his power.
But the “pride of birth” was sorely wounded by the espousals; and the enmity of
the aristocracy already roused, now became deeply rooted. Eleanor’s disposition
is represented as passionate and unreasonable, and her mind sordid and
oppressive. Be this how it may, we must remember that it is from her enemies we
learn it; and if so, unrelenting persecution and inveterate malice were
proceedings ill calculated to soothe a temper prone to violence, or to elevate
a mind undoubtedly weak. But the vindictive and haughty cardinal Beaufort was
the open and secret enemy of the good duke Humphrey; for not only did he thwart
every public measure proposed by his rival, but employed spies to insinuate
themselves into his domestic circle, and to note and inform him of every little
circumstance which malice could distort into crime, or party rage into treason.
This detestable espionage met with a too speedy success. The duke, who was
especially fond of the society of learned men, retained in his family many priests
and clerks, and among them one Roger Bolingbroke, “a famous necromancer and
astronomer”. This was a sufficient ground for the enmity of the cardinal to
feed upon, and he determined to annihilate at one blow the domestic happiness
of his rival. He arrested the Duchess, Bolingbroke, and a witch called Margery
Gourdimain, or Jourdayn, on the charge of witchcraft and treason. He accused
the priest and Margery of making, and the duchess for having in her possession,
a waxen figure, which, as she melted it before a slow fire, so would the body
of the king waste and decay, and his marrow wither in his bones. Her enemies
tried her, and of course found her and her companions guilty, though without a
shred of evidence to the purpose. The duchess was sentenced to do penance in
St. Paul's and two other churches on three separate days, and to be afterwards
imprisoned in the Isle of Man for life. Bolingbroke, who protested his
innocence to the last, was hung and quartered at Tyburn; and Margery, the witch
of Eye, as she was called, was burnt at Smithfield. But the black enmity of the
cardinal was sorely disappointed at the effect produced by this persecution. He
reasonably judged that no accusation was so likely to arouse a popular
prejudice against duke Humphrey as appealing to the superstition of the people
who in that age were ever prone to receive the most incredulous fabrications;
but far different was the impression made in the present case. The people with
more than their usual sagacity saw through the flimsy designs of the cardinal
and his faction; and while they pitied the victims of party malice, loved and
esteemed the good duke Humphrey more than ever.
But the intriguing heart of Beaufort soon resolved
upon the most desperate measures, and shrunk not from staining his priestly
hands with innocent and honorable blood. A parliament was summoned to meet at
St. Edmunds Bury, in Suffolk, on the 10th of February, 1447, at which all the
nobility were ordered to assemble. On the arrival of Duke Humphrey, the
cardinal arrested him on a groundless charge of high treason, and a few days
after he was found dead in his bed, his enemies gave out that he had died of
the palsy; but although his body was eagerly shown to the sorrowing multitude,
the people believed that their friend and favorite had been foully murdered,
and feared not to raise their voice in loud accusations at the Suffolk party;
“some said that he was smoldered betwixt two feather beddes”, and
others declared that he had suffered a still more barbarous death. Deep was the
murmuring and the grief of the people, for the good duke had won the love and
esteem of their hearts; and we can fully believe a contemporary who writes—
Compleyne al Yngland thys goode Lorde’s deth.
Lydgate.
Perhaps none suffered more by his death than the
author and the scholar; for Duke Humphrey was a munificent patron of letters,
and loved to correspond with learned men, many of whom dedicated their works to
him, and received ample encouragement in return. Lydgate, who knew him well,
composed some of his pieces at the duke's instigation. In his Tragedies of Ihon
Bochas he thus speaks of him:
Duke of Gloucester men this prince call,
And not withstanding his estate and dignity,
His courage never dote appall
To study in books of antiquity;
Therein he hath so great felicity,
Virtuously himself to occupy,
Of vicious sloth, he hath the mastery.
And for these causes as in his entent
To show the untrust of all worldly things,
He gave to me in commandment
As him seemed it was right well fitting
That I should, after my small cunning,
This book translate, him to do pleasance,
To show the change of worldly variance.
And with support of his magnificence
Under the wings of his correction,
Though that I lack of eloquence
I shall proceed in this translation.
From me avoiding all presumption,
Loudly submitting every hour and space,
My rude language to my lord’s grace.
Anone after I of extension,
With penne in hand fast gain me speed,
As I could in my translation,
In this labor further to proceed,
My Lord came forth by and gain to take heed;
This mighty prince right manly and right wise
Gave me charge in his prudent auyle.
That I should in every tragedy,
After the process made mention,
At the end set a remedy,
With a Lenuoy, conveyed by reason;
And after that, with humble affection,
To noble princes lowly it direct,
By others falling themselves to correct.
And I obeyed his bidding and pleasance
Under support of his magnificence,
As I could, I gain my penne audience,
All be I was barren of eloquence,
Following mine auctor in substance
and sentence,
For it suffice plainly unto me,
So that my lord my making take in gre."
Lydgate often received money whilst translating this
work, from the good duke Humphrey, and there is a manuscript letter in the
British Museum in which he writes—
Righte myghty prynce, and it be youre wille,
Condescende leyser for to take,
To se the contents of thys litel bille,
Whiche whan I wrote my hand felt quake.
Duke Humphrey gave a noble instance of his great love
of learning in the year 1439, when he presented to the University of Oxford one
hundred and twenty-nine treatises, and shortly after, one hundred and
twenty-six admirandi apparatus; and in the same year, nine more. In
1443, he made another important donation of one hundred and thirty volumes, to
which he added one hundred and thirty-five more, making in all, a collection of
five hundred and thirty-eight volumes. These treasures, too, had been collected
with all the nice acumen of a bibliomaniac, and the utmost attention was paid
to their outward condition and internal purity. Never, perhaps, were so many
costly copies seen before, dazzling with the splendor of their illuminations, and
rendered inestimable by the many faithful miniatures with which they were
enriched. A superb copy of Valerius Maximus is the only relic of that costly
and noble gift, a solitary but illustrious example of the membraneous treasures
of that ducal library. But alas! those very indications of art, those exquisite
illuminations, were the fatal cause of their unfortunate end; the portraits of
kings and eminent men, with which the historical works were adorned; the
diagrams which pervaded the scientific treatises, were viewed by the zealous
reformers of Henry's reign, as damning evidence of their Popish origin and use;
and released from the chains with which they were secured, they were hastily
committed to the greedy flames. Thus perished the library of Humphrey, duke of
Gloucester! and posterity have to mourn the loss of many an early gem of
English literature.
But in the fourteenth century many other honorable
examples occur of lay collectors. The magnificent volumes, nine hundred in
number, collected by Charles V of France, a passionate bibliomaniac, were
afterwards brought by the duke of Bedford into England. The library then
contained eight hundred and fifty-three volumes, so sumptuously bound and
gorgeously illuminated as to be valued at 2,223 livres! This choice importation
diffused an eager spirit of inquiry among the more wealthy laymen. Humphrey,
the "good duke," received some of these volumes as presents, and
among others, a rich copy of Livy, in French. Guy Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick,
also collected some choice tomes, and possessed an unusually interesting
library of early romances. He left the whole of them to the monks of Bordesley
Abbey in Worcestershire, about the year 1359. As a specimen of a private
library in the fourteenth century, I am tempted to extract it.
“A tus iceux, qe ceste lettre verront, ou orrount, Gwy
de Beauchamp, Comte de Warr. Saluz en Deu. Saluz nous aveir baylé e en la garde
le Abbé e le Covent de Bordesleye, lessé à demorer a touz jours touz les
Romaunces de sonz nomes; ceo est assaveyr, un volum, qe est appelé Tresor.
Un volum, en le quel est le premer livere de
Lancelot, e un volum del Romaunce de Aygnes.
Un Sauter de Romaunce.
Un volum des
Evangelies, e de Vie des Seins.
Un volum, qe p'le des quatre principals Gestes de
Charles, e de dooun, e de Meyace e de Girard de Vienne e de Emery de Nerbonne.
Un volum del Romaunce Emmond de Ageland, e deu Roy
Charles dooun de Nauntoyle. E le Romaunce de Gwyoun de Nauntoyl.
E un volum del Romaunce Titus et Vespasien.
E un volum del Romaunce Josep ab Arimathie, e deu
Seint Grael.
E un volum, qe p'le coment Adam fust eniesté hors de
paradys, e le Genesie.
E un volum en le quel sount contenuz touns des
Romaunces, ceo este assaveir, Vitas patrum au comencement; e pus un Comte de
Auteypt; e la Vision Seint Pol; et pus les Vies des xii. Seins.
E le Romaunce de Willame de Loungespe.
E Autorites des Seins
humes.
E le Mirour de Alme.
Un volum, en le quel sount contenuz la Vie Seint Pére
e Seint Pol, e des autres liv.
E un volum qe est appelé l'Apocalips.
E un livere de Phisik, e de Surgie.
Un volum del Romaunce de Gwy, e de la Reygne tut
enterement.
Un volum del Romaunce de Troies.
Un volum del Romaunce de Willame de Orenges e de
Teband de Arabie.
Un volum del Romaunce de Amase e de Idoine.
Un volum del Romaunce de Girard de Viene.
Un volum del Romaunce deu Brut, e del Roy Costentine.
Un volum de le enseignemt Aristotle enveiez au Roy
Alisaundre.
Un volum de la mort ly Roy Arthur, e de Mordret.
Un volum en le quel sount contenuz les Enfaunces de
Nostre Seygneur, coment il fust mené en Egipt.
E la Vie Seint Edwd.
E la Visioun Seint Pol. La Vengeaunce n're Seygneur
par Vespasien a Titus, e la Vie Seint Nicolas, qe fust nez en Patras.
E la Vie Seint Eustace.
E la Vie Seint Cudlac.
E la Passioun n're Seygneur.
E la Meditacioun Seint Bernard de n're Dame Seint
Marie, e del Passioun sour deuz fiz Jesu Creist n're Seignr.
E la Vie Seint Eufrasie.
E la Vie Seint Radegounde.
E la Vie Seint Juliane.
Un volum, en le quel est aprise de Enfants et lumière
à Lays.
Un volum del Romaunce d'a Alisaundre, ove peintures.
Un petit rouge livere, en le quel sount contenuz mons
diverses choses.
Un volum del Romaunce des Mareschans, e de Ferebras e
de Alisaundre.
Les queus livres nous grauntons par nos heyrs e par
nos assignes qil demorront en la dit Abbeye, etc.”
CHAPTER XII
The Dominicans. The Franciscans and the Carmelites.
The old monastic orders of St. Augustine and St.
Benedict, of whose love of books we have principally spoken hitherto, were kept
from falling into sloth and ignorance in the thirteenth century by the
appearance of several new orders of devotees. The Dominicans (thirteen
Dominicans were sent into England in the year 1221; they held their first
provincial council in England in 1230 at Oxford, three years before St. Dominic
was canonized by pope Gregory), the Franciscans (four clerics and five
laymen of the Franciscan order were sent into England in 1224; ten years
afterwards we find their disciples spreading over the whole of England),
and the Carmelites were each renowned for their profound learning, and their
unquenchable passion for knowledge; assuming a garb of the most abject poverty,
renouncing all love of the world, all participation in its temporal honors, and
refraining to seek the aggrandizement of their order by fixed oblations or
state endowments, but adhering to a voluntary system for support, they caused a
visible sensation among all classes, and wrought a powerful change in the
ecclesiastical and collegiate learning of the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries; and by their devotion, their charity, their strict austerity, and by
their brilliant and unconquerable powers of disputation, soon gained the
respect and affections of the people (Edward the Second regarded them with
great favor, and wrote several letters to the pope in their praise).
Much as the friars have been condemned, or darkly as
they have been represented, I have no hesitation in saying that they did more
for the revival of learning, and the progress of English literature, than any
other of the monastic orders. We cannot trace their course without admiration
and astonishment at their splendid triumphs and success; they appear to act as
intellectual crusaders against the prevailing ignorance and sloth. The finest
names that adorn the literary annals of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries,
the most prolific authors who flourished during that long period were begging
friars; and the very spirit that was raised against them by the churchmen, and
the severe controversial battles which they had between them, were the means of
doing a vast amount of good, of exposing ignorance in high places, and
compelling those who enjoyed the honors of learning to strive to merit them, by
a studious application to literature and science; need I do more than mention
the shining names of Duns Scotus, of Thomas Aquinas, of Roger Bacon, the
founder of experimental philosophy, and the justly celebrated Robert Grostest,
the most enlightened ecclesiastic of his age.
(A list of celebrated authors who flourished in
England, and who were members of the Dominican Order, will be found
in Steven’s Monasticon, vol. ii. p. 193, more than 80 names
are mentioned. A similar list of authors of the Franciscan order will be
found at p, 97 of vol. I. containing 122 names; and of the Carmelite
authors, vol. II. p. 160, specifying 137 writers; a great proportion of
their works are upon the Scriptures).
We may not admire the scholastic philosophy which the
followers of Francis and Dominic held and expounded; we may deplore the
intricate mazes and difficulties which a false philosophy led them to maintain,
and we may equally deplore the waste of time and learning which they lavished
in the vain hope of solving the mysteries of God, or in comprehending a loose
and futile science. Yet the philosophy of the schoolmen is but little
understood, and is too often condemned without reason or without proof; for
those who trouble themselves to denounce, seldom care to read them; their
ponderous volumes are too formidable to analyze; it is so much easier to
declaim than to examine such sturdy antagonists; but we owe to the schoolmen
far more than we are apt to suppose, and if it were possible to scratch their
names from the page of history, and to obliterate all traces of their bulky
writings from our libraries and from our literature, we should find our
knowledge dark and gloomy in comparison with what it is.
But the mendicant orders did not study and uphold the
scholastic philosophy without improving it; the works of Aristotle, of which it
is said the early schoolmen possessed only a vitiated translation from the
Arabic, was, at the period these friars sprung up, but imperfectly understood
and taught. Michael Scot, with the assistance of a learned Jew, translated and
published the writings of the great philosopher in Latin, which greatly
superseded the old versions derived from the Saracen copies.
The mendicant friars having qualified themselves with
a respectable share of Greek learning, then taught and expounded the Aristotelian
philosophy according to this new translation, and opened a new and proscribed
field for disputation and enquiry (at a council held at Paris in the year
1209, the works of Aristotle were proscribed and ordered to be burnt. Launvius
de Varia Aristotelis fortuna. But in spite of the papal mandate the friars
revived its use. Richard Fizacre, an intimate friend of Roger Bacon, was so
passionately fond of reading Aristotle, that he always carried one of his works
in his bosom); their indomitable perseverance, their acute powers of
reasoning, and the splendid popularity which many of the disciples of St.
Dominic and St. Francis were fast acquiring, caused students to flock in crowds
to their seats of learning, and all who were inspired to an acquaintance with scholastic
philosophy placed themselves under their training and tuition.
No religious order before them ever carried the spirit
of inquiry to such an extent as they, or allowed it to wander over such an
unbounded field. The most difficult and mysterious questions of theology were
discussed and fearlessly analyzed; far from exercising that blind and easy
credulity which mark the religious conduct of the old monastic orders, they
were disposed to probe and examine every article of their faith. To such an extent
were their disputations carried, that sometimes it shook their faith in the
orthodoxy of Rome, and often aroused the pious fears of the more timid of their
own order. Angell de Pisa, who founded the school of the Franciscans or Grey
Friars at Oxford, is said to have gone one day into his school, with a view to
discover what progress the students were making in their studies; as he entered
he found them warm in disputation, and was shocked to find that the question at
issue was “whether there was a God”; the good man, greatly alarmed,
cried out, “Alas, for me! alas, for me! simple brothers pierce the heavens and
the learned dispute whether there be a God!”, and with great indignation ran
out of the house blaming himself for having established a school for such
fearful disputes; but he afterwards returned and remained among his pupils, and
purchased for ten marks a corrected copy of the decretals, to which he made his
students apply their minds. This school was the most flourishing of those
belonging to the Franciscans; and it was here that the celebrated Robert
Grostest, bishop of Lincoln, read lectures about the year 1230. He was a
profound scholar, thoroughly conversant with the most abstruse matters of
philosophy, and a great Bible reader. He possessed an extensive knowledge of
the Greek, and translated, into Latin, Dionysius the Areopagite, Damascenus,
Suida’s Greek Lexicon, a Greek Grammar, and, with the assistance of Nicholas, a
monk of St. Alban’s, the History of the Twelve Patriarchs. He collected
a fine library of Greek books, many of which he obtained from Athens. Roger
Bacon speaks of his knowledge of the Greek, and says, that he caused a vast
number of books to be gathered together in that tongue. His extraordinary
talent and varied knowledge caused him to be deemed a conjuror and astrologer
by the ignorant and superstitious; and his enemies, who were numerous and
powerful, did not refuse to encourage the slanderous report. We find him so
represented by the poet Gower:—
"For of the grete clerk Grostest,
I rede how redy that he was
Upon clergye, and bede of bras,
To make and forge it, for to telle
Of suche thynges as befelle,
And seven yeres besinesse.
Ye ladye, but for the lackhesse
Of 'a halfe a mynute of an houre,
Fro fyrst that he began laboure,
Ye lost al that he had do."
Robert Grosseteste.
The Franciscan convent at Oxford contained two
libraries, one for the use of the graduates and one for the secular students,
who did not belong to their order, but who were receiving instruction from
them. Grostest gave many volumes to these libraries, and at his death he
bequeathed to the convent all his books, which formed no doubt a fine
collection. “To these were added”, says Wood, “the works of Roger Bacon, who,
Bale tells us, writ an hundred Treatises. There were also volumes of other
writers of the same order, which, I believe, amounted to no small number. In
short, I guess that these libraries were filled with all sorts of erudition,
because the friars of all orders, and chiefly the Franciscans, used so
diligently to procure all monuments of literature from all parts, that wise men
looked upon it as an injury to laymen, who, therefore, found a difficulty to
get any books. Several books of Grosseteste and Bacon treated of astronomy and
mathematics, besides some relating to the Greek tongue. But these friars, as I
have found by certain ancient manuscripts, bought many Hebrew books of the Jews
who were disturbed in England. In a word, they, to their utmost power,
purchased whatsoever was anywhere to be had of singular learning”.
Many of the smaller convents of the Franciscan order
possessed considerable libraries, which they purchased or received as gifts
from their patrons (the Mendicant orders, unlike the monks, were not remarkable
for their industry in transcribing books: their roving life was unsuitable to
the tedious profession of a scribe). There was a house of Grey Friars at
Exeter, and Roger de Thoris, Archdeacon of Exeter, gave or lent them a library
of books in the year 1266, soon after their establishment, reserving to himself
the privilege of using them, and forbade the friars from selling or parting
with them. The collection, however, contained less than twenty volumes, and was
formed principally of the scriptures and writings of their own order.
"Whosoever”, concludes the document, “shall presume hereafter to separate
or destroy this donation of mine, may he incur the malediction of the
omnipotent God! dated on the day of the purification, in the year of our Lord
MCCLXVI”.
Libraries in London.
The library of the Grey Friars in London was of more
than usual magnificence and extent. It was founded by the celebrated Richard
Whittington. Its origin is thus set forth in an old manuscript in the Cottonian
library:
“In the year of our Lord, 1421, the worshipful Richard
Whyttyngton, knight and mayor of London, began the new library and laid the
first foundation-stone on the 21st day of October; that is, on the feast of St.
Hilarion the abbot. And the following year before the feast of the nativity of
Christ, the house was raised and covered; and in three years after, it was
floored, whitewashed, glazed, adorned with shelves, statues, and carving, and
furnished with books: and the expenses about what is aforesaid amount to
£556:16:9; of which sum, the aforesaid Richard Whyttyngton paid £400, and the
residue was paid by the reverend father B. Thomas Winchelsey and his friends,
to whose soul God be propitious.—Amen”.
Among some items of money expended, we find, “for the
works of Doctor de Lyra contained in two volumes, now in the chains, 100 marks,
of which B. John Frensile remitted 20s.; and for the Lectures of Hostiensis,
now lying in the chains, 5 marks”. Leland speaks in the most enthusiastic terms
of this library, and says, that it far surpassed all others for the number and
antiquity of its volumes. John Wallden bequeathed as many manuscripts of
celebrated authors as were worth two thousand pounds.
The library of the Dominicans in London was also at
one time well stored with valuable books. Leland mentions some of those he
found there, and among them some writings of Wicliff; indeed those of this
order were renowned far and wide for their love of study; look at the old
portraits of a Dominican friar, and you will generally see him with the pen in
one hand and a book in the other; but they were more ambitious in literature
than the monks, and aimed at the honors of an author rather than at those of a
scribe; but we are surprised more at their fertility than at their style or
originality in the mysteries of bookcraft. Henry Esseburn diligently read at
Oxford, and devoted his whole soul to study, and wrote a number of works,
principally on the Bible; he was appointed to govern the Dominican monastery at
Chester; “being remote from all schools, he made use of his spare hours to
revise and polish what he had writ at Oxford; having performed the same to his
own satisfaction, he caused his works to be fairly transcribed, and copies of
them to be preserved in several libraries of his order”. But they did not
usually pay so much attention to the duties of transcribing. The Dominicans
were fond of the physical sciences, and have been accused of too much
partiality for occult philosophy. Leland tells us that Robert Perserutatur, a
Dominican, was over solicitous in prying into the secrets of philosophy, and
lays the same charge to many others (his works were of the impressions of the
Air—of the Wonder of the Elements—of Ceremonial Magic—of the Mysteries of
Secrets—and the Correction of Chemistry).
The Carmelites were more careful in transcribing books
than the Dominicans, and anxiously preserved them from dust and worms; but I
can find but little notice of their libraries; the one at Oxford was a large
room, where they arranged their books in cases made for that purpose; before
the foundation of this library, the Carmelites kept their books in chests, and
doubtless gloried in an ample store of manuscript treasures.
But in the fifteenth century we find the Mendicant
Friars, like the order religious sects, disregarding those strict principles of
piety which had for two hundred years so distinguished their order. The holy
rules of St. Francis and St. Dominic were seldom read with much attention, and
never practiced with severity; they became careless in the propagation of
religious principles, relaxed in their austerity, and looked with too much
fondness on the riches and honors of the world. This diminution in religious
zeal was naturally accompanied by a proportionate decrease in learning and love
of study. The sparkling orator, the acute controversialist, or the profound
scholar, might have been searched for in vain among the Franciscans or the
Dominicans of the fifteenth century. Careless in literary matters, they thought
little of collecting books, or preserving even those which their libraries
already contained; the Franciscans at Oxford “sold many of their books to Dr.
Thomas Gascoigne, about the year 1433, which he gave to the libraries of
Lincoln, Durham, Baliol, and Oriel. They also declining in strictness of life
and learning, sold many more to other persons, so that their libraries declined
to little or nothing”.
We are not therefore surprised at the disappointment
of Leland, on examining this famous repository; his expectations were raised by
the care with which he found the library guarded, and the difficulty he had to
obtain access to it: but when he entered, he did not find one-third the number
of books which it originally contained; but dust and cobwebs, moths and beetles
he found in abundance, which swarmed over the empty shelves.
The mendicant friars have rendered themselves famous
by introducing theatrical representations for the amusement and instruction of
the people. These shows were usually denominated miracles, moralities, or
mysteries, and were performed by the friars in their convents or on portable
stages, which were wheeled into the market places and streets for the
convenience of the spectators.
The friars of the monastery of the Franciscans at
Coventry are particularly celebrated for their ingenuity in performing these
pageants on Corpus Christi day; a copy of this play or miracle is preserved in
the Cottonian Collection, written in old English rhyme. It embraces the
transactions of the Old and New Testament, and is entitled Ludus Corpus
Christi. It commences—
A PLAIE CALLED CORPUS CHRISTI.
Now gracyous God groundyd of all goodnesse,
As thy grete glorie neuyr begynnyng had;
So you succour and save all those that sytt and sese,
And lystenyth to our talkyng with sylens stylle and
sad,
For we purpose no pertly stylle in his prese
The pepyl to plese with pleys ful glad,
Now lystenyth us lowly both mar and lesse
Gentyllys and ȝemaury off goodly lyff lad,
þis
tyde,
We call you shewe us that we kan,
How that þis werd fyrst began,
And howe God made bothe worlde and man
If yt ye wyll abyde.
These miracles were intended to instruct the more
ignorant, or those whose circumstances placed the usual means of acquiring
knowledge beyond their reach; but as books became accessible, they were no
longer needed; the printing press made the Bible, from which the plots of the
miracle plays were usually derived, common among the people, and these gaudy
representations were swept away by the Reformation; but they were temporarily
revived in Queen Mary’s time, with the other abominations of the church papal,
for we find that “in the year 1556 a goodly stage play of the Passion of Christ
was presented at the Grey Friers in London on Corpus Christi day”, before the
Lord Mayor and citizens; but we have nothing here to do with anecdotes
illustrating a period so late as this.
We have now arrived at the dawn of a new era in
learning, and the slow, plodding, laborious scribes of the monasteries were
startled by the appearance of an invention with which their poor pens had no
power to compete. The year 1472 was the last of the parchment literature of the
monks, and the first in the English annals of printed learning; but we must not
forget that the monks with all their sloth and ignorance, were the foremost
among the encouragers of the early printing press in England; the monotony of
the dull cloisters of Westminster Abbey was broken by the clanking of Caxton’s
press; and the prayers of the monks of old St. Albans mingled with the echoes
of the pressman’s labor. Little did those barefooted priests know what an
opponent to their Romish rites they were fostering into life; their love of
learning and passion for books, drove all fear away; and the splendor of the
new power so dazzled their eyes that they could not clearly see the nature of
the refulgent light just bursting through the gloom of ages.
After the invention of the printing art, bibliomania
took some mighty strides; and many choice collectors, full of ardor in the
pursuit, became renowned for the vast book stores they amassed together. But
some of their names have been preserved and good deeds chronicled by Dibdin, of
bibliographical renown; so that a chapter is not necessary here to extol them.
We may judge how fashionable the avocation became by the keen satire of
Alexander Barkley, in his translation of Brandt’s Navis Stultifera or Shyp
of Folys, who gives a curious illustration of a bibliomaniac; and thus
speaks of those collectors who amassed their book treasures without possessing
much esteem for their contents.
That in this ship the chiefe place I gouerne,
By this wide sea with fooles wandring,
The cause is plain & easy to discerne
Still am I busy, bookes assembling,
For to have plentie it is a pleasaunt thing
In my conceyt, to have them ay in hand,
But what they meane do I not understande.
"But yet I have them in great reverence
And honoure, sauing them from filth & ordure
By often brushing & much diligence
Full goodly bounde in pleasaunt couerture
Of Damas, Sattin, or els of velvet pure
I keepe them sure, fearing least they should be lost,
For in them is the cunning wherein I me boast.
"But if it fortune that any learned man
Within my house fall to disputation,
I drawe the curtaynes to shewe my bokes them,
That they of my cunning should make probation
I love not to fall in alterication,
And while the commen, my bokes
I turne and winde
For all is in them, and nothing in my minde.
"Ptolomeus the riche caused, longe agone,
Over all the worlde good bookes to be sought,
Done was his commandement—anone
These bokes he had, and in his studie brought,
Which passed all earthly treasure as he thought,
But neverthelesse he did him not apply
Unto their doctrine, but lived unhappily.
"Lo, in likewise of bookes I have store,
But fewe I reade and fewer understande,
I folowe not their doctrine nor their lore,
It is ynough to beare a booke in hande.
It were too muche to be in such a bande,
For to be bounde to loke within the booke
I am content on the fayre coveryng to looke.
"Why should I studie to hurt my wit therby,
Or trouble my minde with studie excessiue.
Sithe many are which studie right busely,
And yet therby thall they never thrive
The fruite of wisdome can they not contriue,
And many to studie so muche are inclinde,
That utterly they fall out of their minde.
"Eche is not lettred that nowe is made a lorde,
Nor eche a clerke that hath a benefice;
They are not all lawyers that pleas do recorde,
All that are promoted are not fully wise;
On suche chaunce nowe fortune throwes her dice
That though we knowe but the yrishe game,
Yet would he have a gentleman's name.
"So in like wise I am in suche case,
Though I nought can, I would be called wise,
Also I may set another in my place,
Whiche may for me my bokes exercise,
Or els I shall ensue the common guise,
And say concedo to euery argument,
Least by much speache my latin should be spent.
"I am like other Clerkes, which so frowardly them
gyde,
That after they are once come unto promotion,
They give them to pleasure, their study set aside,
Their auarice couering with fained deuotion;
Yet dayly they preache and have great derision
Against the rude laymen, and all for couetise,
Through their owne conscience be blended with that
vice.
"But if I durst truth plainely utter and
expresse,
This is the speciall cause of this inconvenience,
That greatest of fooles & fullest of lewdness,
Having least wit and simplest science,
Are first promoted, & have greatest reverence;
For if one can flatter & bear a hauke on his fist,
He shall be made Parson of Honington or of Elist.
"But he that is in study ay firme and diligent,
And without all favour preacheth Christe's love,
Of all the Cominalite nowe adayes is sore shent,
And by estates threatned oft therfore.
Thus what anayle is it to us to study more,
To knowe ether Scripture, truth, wisdome, or virtue,
Since fewe or none without fauour dare them shewe.
"But O noble Doctours, that worthy are of name,
Consider oure olde fathers, note well their diligence,
Ensue ye to their steppes, obtayne ye suche fame
As they did living; and that, by true prudence
Within their heartes, thy planted their science,
And not in pleasaunt bookes, but noue to fewe suche
be,
Therefore to this ship come you & rowe with me.
"The Lennoy of Alexander Barclay,
Translatour, exhorting the fooles accloyed
with this vice, to amende their foly.
"Say worthie Doctours & Clerkes curious,
What moneth you of bookes to have such number,
Since diuers doctrines through way contrarious,
Doth man's minde distract and sore encomber.
Alas blinde men awake, out of your slumber;
And if ye will needes your bookes multiplye,
With diligence endeuor you some to occupye".
CHAPTER XIII
Conclusion.
We have traversed through the darkness of many long
and dreary centuries, and with the aid of a few old manuscripts written by the
monks in the scriptoria of their monasteries, caught an
occasional glimpse of their literary labors and love of books; these parchment
volumes being mere monastic registers, or terse historic compilations, do not
record with particular care the anecdotes applicable to my subject, but appear
to be mentioned almost accidentally, and certainly without any ostentatious
design; but such as they are we learn from them at least one thing, which some
of us might not have known before—that the monks of old, besides telling their
beads, singing psalms, and muttering their breviary, had yet one other duty to
perform—the transcription of books. And I think there is sufficient evidence
that they fulfilled this obligation with as much zeal as those of a more
strictly monastic or religious nature. It is true, in casting our eye over the
history of their labors, many regrets will arise that they did not manifest a
little more taste and refinement in their choice of books for transcribing. The
classical scholar will wish the holy monks had thought more about his darling
authors of Greece and Rome; but the pious puritan historian blames them for
patronizing the romantic allurements of Ovid, or the loose satires of Juvenal,
and throws out some slanderous hint that they must have found a sympathy in
those pages of licentiousness, or why so anxious to preserve them? The
protestant is still more scandalized, and denounces the monks, their books,
scriptorium and all together as part and parcel of popish craft and Romish
superstition. But surely the crimes of popedom and the evils of monachism, that
thing of dry bones and fabricated relics, are bad enough; and the protestant
cause is sufficiently holy, that we may afford to be honest if we cannot to be
generous. What good purpose then will it serve to cavil at the monks forever?
All readers of history know how corrupt they became in the fifteenth century;
how many evils were wrought by the craft of some of them, and how pernicious
the system ultimately waxed. We can all, I say, reflect upon these things, and
guard against them in future; but it is not just to apply the same
indiscriminate censure to all ages. Many of the purest Christians of the
church, the brightest ornaments of Christ's simple flock, were barefooted cowled
monks of the cloister; devout perhaps to a fault, with simplicity verging on
superstition; yet nevertheless faithful, pious men, and holy. Look at all this
with an eye of charity; avoid their errors and manifold faults: but to forget
the loathsome thing our minds have conjured up as the type of an ancient monk.
Remember they had a few books to read, and venerated something more than the
dry bones of long withered saints. Their God was our God, and their Saviour,
let us trust, will be our Saviour.
I am well aware that many other names might have been
added to those mentioned in the foregoing pages, equally deserving remembrance,
and offering pleasing anecdotes of a student's life, or illustrating the early
history of English learning; many facts and much miscellaneous matter I have
collected in reference to them; but I am fearful whether my readers will regard
this subject with sufficient relish to enjoy more illustrations of the same
kind. Students are apt to get too fond of their particular pursuit, which
magnifies in importance with the difficulties of their research, or the
duration of their studies. I am uncertain whether this may not be my own
position, and wait the decision of my readers before proceeding further in the
annals of early bibliomania.
Moreover as to the simple question—Were the monks
booklovers? enough I think as been said to prove it, but the enquiry is far
from exhausted; and if the reader should deem the matter still equivocal and
undecided, he must refer the blame to the feebleness of my pen, rather than to
the barrenness of my subject. But let him not fail to mark well the instances I
have given; let him look at Benedict Biscop and his foreign travels after
books; at Theodore and the early Saxons of the seventh century; at Boniface, Alcuin,
Ælfric, and the numerous votaries of bibliomania who flourished then. Look at
the well stored libraries of St. Albans, Canterbury, Ramsey, Durham, Croyland,
Peterborough, Glastonbury, and their thousand tomes of parchment literature.
Look at Richard de Bury and his sweet little work on biographical experience;
at Whethamstede and his industrious pen; read the rules of monastic orders; the
book of Cassian; the regulations of St. Augustine; Benedict Fulgentius; and the
ancient admonitions of many other holy and ascetic men. Search over the
remnants and shreds of information which have escaped the ravages of time, and
the havoc of cruel invasions relative to these things. Attend to the import of
these small still whisperings of a forgotten age; and then, letting the eye
traverse down the stream of time, mark the great advent of the Reformation;
that wide gulf of monkish erudition in which was swallowed “whole shyppes full”
of olden literature; think well and deeply over the huge bonfires of Henry’s
reign, the flames of which were kindled by the libraries which monkish industry
had transcribed. A merry sound no doubt, was the crackling of those “popish
books” for protestant ears to feed upon!
Now all these facts thought of collectively—brought to
bear one upon another—seem to favor the opinion my own study has deduced from
them; that with all their superstition, with all their ignorance, their
blindness to philosophic light—the monks of old were hearty lovers of books;
that they encouraged learning, fostered and transcribed repeatedly the books
which they had rescued from the destruction of war and time; and so kindly
cherished and husbanded them as intellectual food for posterity. Such being the
case, let our hearts look charitably upon them; and whilst we pity them for
their superstition, or blame them for their “pious frauds”, love them as
brother men and workers in the mines of literature; such a course is far more
honorable to the tenor of a christian’s heart, than bespattering their memory
with foul denunciations.
Some may accuse me of having shown too much
fondness—of having dwelt with a too loving tenderness in my retrospection of
the middle ages. But in the course of my studies I have found much to admire.
In parchment annals coeval with the times of which they speak, my eyes have
traversed over many consecutive pages with increasing interest and with
enraptured pleasure. I have read of old deeds worthy of an honored remembrance,
where I least expected to find them. I have met with instances of faith as
strong as death bringing forth fruit in abundance in those sterile times, and
glorying God with its lasting incense. I have met with instances of piety
exalted to the heavens—glowing like burning lava, and warming the cold dull
cloisters of the monks. I have read of many a student who spent the long night
in exploring mysteries of the Bible truths; and have seen him sketched by a
monkish pencil with his ponderous volumes spread around him, and the oil
burning brightly by his side. I have watched him in his little cell thus
depicted on the ancient parchment, and have sympathized with his painful
difficulties in acquiring true knowledge, or enlightened wisdom, within the
convent walls; and then I have read the pages of his fellow monk—perhaps, his
book-companion; and heard what he had to say of that poor
lonely Bible student, and have learnt with sadness how often truth had been
extinguished from his mind by superstition, or learning cramped by his monkish
prejudices; but it has not always been so, and I have enjoyed a more gladdening
view on finding in the monk a Bible teacher; and in another, a profound
historian, or pleasing annalist.
As a Christian, the recollection of these cheering
facts, with which my researches have been blessed, are pleasurable, and lead me
to look back upon those old times with a student's fondness. But besides piety
and virtue, I have met with wisdom and philanthropy; the former, too profound,
and the latter, too generous for the age; but these things are precious, and
worth remembering; and how can I speak of them but in words of kindness? It is
these traits of worth and goodness that have gained my sympathies, and twined
round my heart, and not the dark stains on the monkish page of history; these I
have always striven to forget, or to remember them only when I thought
experience might profit by them; for they offer a terrible lesson of blood,
tyranny and anguish. But this dark and gloomy side is the one which from our
infancy has ever been before us; we learnt it when a child from our tutor; or
at college, or at school; we learnt it in the pages of our best and purest
writers; learnt that in those old days nought existed, but bloodshed, tyranny,
and anguish; but we never thought once to gaze at the scene behind, and behold
the workings of human charity and love; if we had, we should have found that
the same passions, the same affections, and the same hopes and fears existed
then as now, and our sympathies would have been won by learning that we were
reading of brother men, fellow Christians, and fellow-companions in the Church
of Christ. We have hitherto looked, when casting a backward glance at those
long gone ages of inanimation, with the severity of a judge upon a criminal;
but to understand him properly we must regard them with the tender compassion
of a parent; for if our art, our science, and our philosophy exalts us far
above them, is that a proof that there was nothing admirable, nothing that can
call forth our love on that infant state, or in the annals of our civilization
at its early growth?
But let it not be thought that if I have striven to
retrieve from the dust and gloom of antiquity, the remembrance of old things
that are worthy; that I feel any love for the superstition with which we find
them blended. There is much that is good connected with those times; talent
even that is worth imitating, and art that we may be proud to learn, which is
beginning after the elapse of centuries to arrest the attention of the
ingenious, and the love of these, naturally revive with the discovery; but we
need not fear in this resurrection of old things of other days, that the
superstition and weakness of the middle ages; that the veneration for dry bones
and saintly dust, can live again. I do not wish to make the past assume a
superiority over the present; but I think a contemplation of medieval art would
often open a new avenue of thought and lead to many a pleasing and profitable
discovery; I would too add the efforts of my feeble pen to elevate and ennoble
the fond pursuit of my leisure hours. I would say one word to vindicate the
lover of old musty writings, and the explorer of rude antiquities, from the
charge of unprofitableness, and to protect him from the sneer of ridicule. For
whilst some see in the dry studies of the antiquary a mere inquisitiveness
after forgotten facts and worthless relics; I can see, nay, have felt,
something morally elevating in the exercise of these inquiries. It is not the
mere fact which may sometimes be gained by rubbing off the parochial whitewash
from ancient tablets, or the encrusted oxide from monumental brasses, that
render the study of ancient relics so attractive; but it is the deductions
which may sometimes be drawn from them. The light which they sometimes cast on
obscure parts of history, and the fine touches of human sensibility, which
their eulogies and monodies bespeak, that instruct or elevate the mind, and
make the student’s heart beat with holier and loftier feelings. But it is not
my duty here to enter into the motives, the benefits, or the most profitable
manner of studying antiquity; if it were, I would strive to show how much
superior it is to become an original investigator, a practical antiquary, than
a mere borrower from others. For the most delightful moments of the student's
course is when he rambles person ally among the ruins and remnants of long gone
ages; sometimes painful are such sights, even deeply so; but never to a
righteous mind are they unprofitable, much less exerting a narrowing tendency
on the mind, or cramping the gushing of human feeling; for cold, indeed, must
be the heart that can behold strong walls tottering to decay, and fretted
vaults, mutilated and dismantled of their pristine beauty; that can behold the
proud strongholds of baronial power and feudal tyranny, the victims of the
lichen or creeping parasites of the ivy tribe; cold, I say, must be the heart
that can see such things, and draw no lesson from them.