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The Book of Memory

Page 11

by Mary Carruthers

sacris intendere libris.’’97 One notes the allusion to Psalm 1:2 in the

  invitation to meditate upon the holy law; the allusion seems to have been

  fairly commonly used when talking about the reading of Scripture.

  Scrinium maintained its association with books as well as saints through

  the Carolingian period at least. Isidore had some of his verses written on

  the book-cases of the episcopal palace at Seville; among them were these:

  ‘‘En multos libros gestant haec scrinia nostra; / Qui cupis, ecce lege, si tua

  vota libent,’’ ‘‘Lo these our book-boxes breed many books; / You who wish,

  look [and] read, if they answer to your desires.’’98 These books, he writes in

  verses on another wall, are really gardens full of thorns and flowers; if you

  haven’t the strength to take up the thorns, take the roses instead. Take and

  read.99 (Notice again the persistence of memorial gardens.) Around 794,

  Alcuin, complaining of the heat and politics in Rome where he had

  journeyed on business, wrote to a student, ‘‘O how sweet was life when

  we sat quietly among the shrines of wisdom, among the abundance of

  books, among the venerable wisdom of the Fathers.’’100 Thus, as used by

  Isidore and Alcuin, scrinia has become a metaphor for books themselves,

  not only their repository.

  Especially in the earlier Middle Ages, books were decorated in the same

  way as shrines, like reliquaries of saints, another memorial object. Book

  covers with jewels, ivory, and other precious material were used to bind

  Gospels and other precious books, the material making literal the book’s

  function as a scrinium for its contents. The Book of Kells, for example, is

  said to have been originally covered with gold beaten over wood, which

  was wrenched from it after it was stolen in the eleventh century. 101 And it is

  recorded in the Book of Durrow that a silver case was made for it by Flann

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  The Book of Memory

  1. New York, Pierpont Morgan Library MS. 917 (‘‘The Hours of Catherine of Cleves,’’

  Netherlands, Utrecht, c. 1440) p. 300. Pearl and gold jewelry used as a border, as

  in the common trope of the precious jewels of memory, using as an example the ‘‘pearls’’

  of Christian wisdom.

  Models for the memory

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  (d. 916), son of king Malochy of Ireland. Many jewelled book covers

  still exist, however, for the practice continued into the sixteenth century. 102

  As a motif of illumination, jewels – often pearls, rubies, and other stones

  mentioned in the Bible – were commonly painted into the margins of

  Books of Hours at the end of the Middle Ages, an allusion to their nature as

  memorial shrines and thesauri (see figure 1).

  The Middle English word male (Modern English ‘‘mail’’) is a ‘‘travelling-

  bag’’ or ‘‘pack’’ of leather, for leather-makers constructed them. 103 Its

  immediate origin is French, but it is not a Latin-derived word; cognates

  suggest its origin to be Germanic. 104 One could carry various items in a

  male, including clothing and other gear; in the Romance of Sir Bevis of

  Hamptoun someone takes bread and meat from his ‘‘male,’’ and in the

  Towneley First Shepherds’ play a shepherd takes a roasted oxtail from his

  ‘‘mayll.’’105 But they also held valuables, especially gold; thus in Havelock,

  someone carries gold in his ‘‘male’’ on his back; Chaucer’s Pardoner carries

  his relics in his ‘‘male’’; in Piers Plowman, Avarice goes a-thieving in the

  night and riffles some pedlars’ ‘‘males’’; and in the earliest recorded occur-

  rence of the word, in Layamon’s Brut, Gordoille (Goneril) tells a servant

  that her father can have a ‘‘male riche’’ of a hundred pounds. 106

  Males also had at least some internal compartments. Thus a fifteenth-

  century cookbook instructs one to season with various powdered spices ‘‘of

  þe male,’’ ‘‘from your bag’’107 – obviously powders that were kept sepa-

  rately. There is a leather-covered small box bound with a buckled belt and

  cylindrical locks in Holbein’s portrait of the merchant, George Gisze, now

  in the Staatliche Museum, Berlin – his strongbox or male. 108 Such a male is

  like a sacculus, divided into internal compartments for ease of sorting and

  changing money.

  When Chaucer uses the English word figuratively in The Canterbury

  Tales, he has in mind a male such as I have been describing, a leather

  strongbox bound with a buckle, rather than the ‘‘pedlar’s pack’’ that Walter

  Skeat, and every subsequent annotator, gives as a gloss of this word. If it is

  understood in the sense I am suggesting, then the metaphor becomes an

  English-language version (indeed the first recorded) of an author opening

  the organized compartments of his memory to disclose its store of riches.

  Chaucer’s metaphor seems to have been immediately and widely imitated.

  Thus in The Tale of Beryn, ‘‘Harry Bailly’’ asks, ‘‘Who shall be the first that

  shall vnlace his male / In comfort of vs all, & gyn som mery tale?’’109

  (I don’t claim that it was well imitated.)

  But it is Stephen Hawes who most evidently understood this image of

  Chaucer’s as I am suggesting it should be. In The Pastime of Pleasure (1517),

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  The Book of Memory

  Dame Rhetoric, whose wise advice the narrator has carefully ‘‘marked in

  memory’’ (645)110 (that is, ‘‘tagged’’ as well as ‘‘stored’’), gives instructions

  on invention (composition), interesting for being among the earliest

  presentations in English of mnemonic teaching. Invention needs the five

  inward wits, Rhetoric says, the hindermost of which is ‘‘the retentyfe

  memory’’ (750), the agency that gathers together all thought. The orator

  hears various tales, encloses them ‘‘in due ordre’’ (1258) in his retentive

  memory, and, when he needs material, he brings forth both a tale and its

  moral from his store, ‘‘his closed male’’:

  Yf to the orature many a sundry tale

  One after other treatably be tolde

  Than sundry ymages in his closed male

  Eche for a mater he doth than well holde

  Lyke to the tale he doth than so beholde

  And inwarde a recapytulacyon

  Of eche ymage the moralyzacyon

  (1247–1253)

  There are a number of interesting matters in these lines, in addition to

  Hawes’s use of male as an image of trained memory. The image which the

  orator makes for the sundry tales he hears is ‘‘Eche for a mater,’’ that is,

  memory according to the res, the ‘‘matter.’’ He holds these ‘‘One after other

  treatably,’’ in orderly fashion; because the memorial imprinting is ‘‘in due

  ordre, maner and reson,’’ everything comes forth ‘‘eche after other with-

  outen varyaunce.’’ These tales are held in memory according to both the

  subject matter (ad res) and their ‘‘moralyzacyon.’’ Here Hawes means the

  moral category of virtue or vice under which inwardly one ‘‘recapitulates’’

  each ‘‘image’’ – literally gives it a ‘‘re-chapter’’ (from Latin capitula, ‘‘head-

  ing’’), or cross- referenc
e. In other words, one stores the tale itself and also

  indexes it mentally under a subject classification, advice that also occurs in

  some of the early thirteenth-century artes poeticae (see Chapter 4).

  This method of memory is learned in ‘‘the poetes scole’’ (1267), and

  Hawes calls it ‘‘the memoryall arte of rethoryke’’ (1269), which although at

  first obscure will be mastered ‘‘with exercyse’’ (1273). An art, for a medieval

  scholar, was a method and set of guidelines that added order and discipline

  to the pragmatic, natural activities of human beings. Hugh of St. Victor

  remarks in Didascalicon that while people certainly calculated and meas-

  ured, wrote and spoke, reasoned and played music before the artes were

  introduced, the arts gave them order and enabled them to be systematically

  learned. Harkening back to Aristotle’s definition, an art is a set of principles

  deduced from many experiences, which in turn result from many repeated

  memories: ‘‘All sciences, indeed, were matters of practice [in usu] before

  Models for the memory

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  they became matters of art [in arte] . . . what was vague and subject to

  caprice . . . [was] brought into order by definite rules and precepts.’’111

  The final member of the group of metaphors which I want to discuss is

  arca, the commonest and in some ways the most interesting of them all. An

  arca is basically a wooden ‘‘chest’’ or ‘‘box’’ for storage, and, like the other

  items, it came in several sizes and was used for varying purposes. Small

  arcae were used for transporting valuables, including books.112 And the

  chests or cupboards in which books were kept in early monastic libraries

  were sometimes called arcae. So the Regula Magistri states that books

  should be brought for distribution from the ‘‘arca.’’113 When Hugh of

  St. Victor says that wisdom is stored in the ‘‘archa’’ of the heart, and

  there are many compartments in this storage-chamber, he is taking advant-

  age specifically of the long association of arcae with books. Memory is not

  just any strongbox or storage-chest – it is particularly one in which books

  are kept, a powerful portable library. Indeed, as John of Salisbury wrote,

  ‘‘the memory truly is a sort of mental bookcase, a sure and faithful

  custodian of perceptions.’’114

  But there is another meaning of arca which is associated from earliest

  times with the process of Scriptural lectio and study. As arca sapientiae,

  one’s memory is the ideal product of a medieval education, laid out in

  organized loci. One designs and builds one’s own memory according to

  one’s talent, opportunities, and energy. That makes it a construction, an

  aedificatio. As something to be built, the trained memory is an arca in the

  sense understood by the Biblical object called Noah’s Ark, the construction

  of which occupies some detail in Genesis, and the Ark of the Covenant,

  into which the books of the Law were placed: ‘‘Take this book of the law,

  and put it in the side of the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God’’

  (Deut. 31:26). 115

  The double understanding of arca, ‘‘chest,’’ as both the Ark of Noah and

  the Ark of the Covenant, is clearly set out in a painting of the Deluge in the

  Ashburnham Pentateuch, shown in figure 2, a manuscript of the late sixth

  or early seventh century, possibly made in Rome (BnF MS. n.a.l. 2334).

  The Ark, floating above a sea full of drowned corpses, is shaped distinctly

  like a wooden chest with feet, its sides curved and bound with strips of red,

  pink, and brown, that are shown nailed to the surface boards, as leather

  strips were nailed to the frame of an actual chest. It has a wooden door and

  wooden-shuttered windows cut into it, and a wooden cover set over the box

  like the lid of a chest.116

  By no means are architectural devices confined particularly to the

  Herennian mnemonic tradition. Philo speaks of Scriptural study as being

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  The Book of Memory

  2. Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France MS. n.a.l. 2334, fo. 9r. ‘‘The Ashburnham

  [or Tours] Pentateuch’’; late sixth century or early seventh century, Italian [Rome?]

  or Spanish or North African [Carthage?]. Noah’s Ark, in the shape of a four-legged wooden

  storage chest, floats atop a sea of drowned people, animals, and giants.

  Models for the memory

  53

  like constructing a building, 117 and the metaphor is a common one for the

  method of exegesis developed during the Middle Ages, whereby one builds

  layers of interpretation according to allegorical, moral, and mystical senses

  upon the foundation of the literal words. A well-known example of such

  analysis occurs in Gregory the Great’s Moralia in Job: ‘‘For first we lay a

  secure foundation of history; next through typological signification we

  raise up in the citadel of faith a structure of our mind [fabricam mentis]; on

  the outside as well through the grace of the moral sense, we clothe as it were

  the superstructure of the edifice with color.’’118 By mens Gregory meant the

  educated, trained memory; mens frequently is used by medieval writers to

  mean the whole complex of processes occuring in the brain, including

  memory, that precede understanding or intellection. 119 Hugh of St. Victor

  uses Gregory’s description in Didascalicon, but his most original develop-

  ment of it is in his treatise on Noah’s Ark, known in many manuscripts

  with varying titles including ‘‘De arca Noe pro arca sapientiae,’’ ‘‘De archa

  intellectuali,’’ and ‘‘De quatuor archis.’’120

  It was also an exegetical commonplace to regard the development of

  the moral life of a Christian in terms of building a temple or church;

  Jerome’s commentary on Ezekiel’s vision of the Temple contains an

  elaborate example of such exegesis.121 Hugh of St. Victor’s particular genius

  in De archa Noe is to bring together the processes of Scriptural reading,

  moral development, and memory training in the single image of Noah’s

  ark. ‘‘I give you,’’ he writes, ‘‘the ark of Noah as a model of spiritual

  building, which your eye may see outwardly so that your soul may be

  built inwardly in its likeness.’’122 His exegesis is on three levels, though the

  major part of the treatise is devoted to the third: first, the historical ark built

  by Noah; second, the ark of the Church which Christ built; and third, the

  arca sapientiae, which ‘‘every day wisdom builds in our hearts from con-

  tinuous meditation on the law of God.’’123 Hugh’s words make it clear that

  it is memory he means by this last ‘ ark’’; meditatio is the stage at which

  reading is memorized and changed into personal experience, and ‘‘in our

  hearts’’ was understood throughout the Middle Ages to be an adequate

  synonym for ‘ in our memories,’ as the injunction to ‘‘write upon the tables

  of thy heart’ makes clear. Jerome, for instance, glosses the Biblical phrase in

  corde tui as ‘‘in memoriae thesauro.’ 124 Jerome’s comments on Ezekiel 3:2–5,

  when the prophet is instructed to ‘ eat the book,’’ are also of interest:

  ‘
Consumption of the book is the foundation of reading and the basis of

  history. When, by diligent meditation, we store away the book of the Lord in

  our memorial treasury, our belly is filled spiritually and our guts are satisfied

  that we may have, with the apostle Paul [Col. 3:12], the bowels of mercy.’ 125

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  The Book of Memory

  Jerome then links this action of eating the book to the story of Samson

  finding honey in the lion’s mouth (Judges 14:8) and to Proverbs 6:8 (‘‘Go to

  the bee’’), read as an admonition to store the honey of Scripture in one’s

  own memory/heart. In this way, he concludes, one imitates the prudence of

  the serpent and the innocence of the dove (a verse usually understood as an

  exegetical emblem of Ethica). The passage is an astonishingly compact

  memorial gathering-up or chain (catena) of many of the major themes

  which I have discussed in this chapter.

  The arca sapientiae is constructed in the mind of each student. Hugh

  compares it to the arca of the Church, built in the eternal mind of God. In

  human minds, time exists, and yet by disciplined thought we can withdraw

  from it and in some way imitate the eternal present of God. ‘‘Thus, indeed,

  in our mind past, present, and future exist in thought at the same time. If

  therefore by a difficult program of meditation we begin to dwell in our

  heart, then in a certain way we withdraw from time, and, as though made

  dead to the world, we live within God.’’126 It is clear that Hugh specifically

  means memory here, for in his Augustinian-influenced psychology, it is

  memory that makes time. Moreover, through disciplined training of and

  communion with our memory, we build the ark/chest/library of wisdom

  which allows us to dwell inwardly with God, ‘‘per studium meditationis

  assidue,’’ ‘‘through the hard discipline of meditatio.’’ ‘‘This,’’ Hugh con-

  cludes, ‘‘is the ark you ought to build.’’127

  The arca sapientiae is thus the process and product of a medieval

  education, both the construction process and the finished structure. The

  ark of full understanding (arca intellectualis) has three compartments in it

  (mansiones), and Hugh proceeds to detail at some length the characteristics

  of these rooms/way-stations. The ark is, on a grand scale, the compart-

 

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