'Bede and Aethelthryth' asks why Christians in Britain around the year 700 enjoyed Latin poetry. What did they see in it? What did they get from it? This book attempts to reconstruct the horizon of expectation of a highly learned, Latin-speaking nun as she encounters a fifty-line poem by the Venerable Bede, the 'Hymn to Aethelthryth'.
The reconstruction is hypothetical and derived from grammatical manuals, learned commentaries from the early medieval period (especially Servius’s commentary on Virgil), and a wide variety of aesthetic observations by classical and medieval readers. The first four chapters describe basic expectations of a reader of Christian Latin poetry. The fifth chapter places the 'Hymn' in its context within Bede’s 'Ecclesiastical History'. A few pages after Bede records his hymn, Caedmon will recite his own hymn under the watchful eye of Whitby’s Abbess Hild, who was a friend of Aethelthryth.
Both hymns are attempts to reform the lyric traditions of pagan Rome and pagan Anglo-Saxon England in the light of Christian teaching. The last three chapters contain a line-by-line commentary on Bede’s alphabetic, epanaleptic elegy.
Author(s): Stephen J. Harris
Series: Medieval European Studies, 18
Publisher: West Virginia University Press
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: 358
City: Morgantown
Preface ix
Note on Orthography xv
Abbreviations xvii
1. On Beauty 1
2. Metrical Arts 33
3. Rhetoric 60
4. Sources 88
5. St. Aethelthryth in the 'HE' 126
Hymn to Aethelthryth (English) 158
Hymn to Aethelthryth (Latin) 161
Hymn to Aethelthryth (Edition) 164
6. 'Hymn to Aethelthryth', A–G 167
7. 'Hymn to Aethelthryth', H–R 203
8. 'Hymn to Aethelthryth', S–end 243
Works Cited 273
Index 295