Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: The Surrounding Forest
- 1 Mother Earth, Sister Moon and the Great Forest of Tāne
- 2 Beowulf’s Foliate Margins: The Surrounding Forest in Early Medieval England
- 3 Bone, Stone, Wood: Encountering Material Ecologies in Early Medieval Sculpture
- 4 ‘Mervoillous fu li engineres que croix fist de fust, non de pierre’: Materiality and Vernacular Theology in the Wood of the Cross Legend
- 5 The Evolution of Relational Tree-Diagrams from the Twelfth to Fourteenth Century: Visual Devices and Models of Knowledge
- 6 From Forest to Orchard: Arboreal Areas as Mnemotechnic Supports in the Middle Ages
- 7 The Vegetal Imaginary in Exemplary Literature: The Case of the Ci nous dit
- 8 Adam’s Sister: Tree Symbolism in Premodern Mystical Islamic Cosmology
- Concluding Reflections
- Appendix: Further Reading
- Bibliography
- Index
Concluding Reflections
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: The Surrounding Forest
- 1 Mother Earth, Sister Moon and the Great Forest of Tāne
- 2 Beowulf’s Foliate Margins: The Surrounding Forest in Early Medieval England
- 3 Bone, Stone, Wood: Encountering Material Ecologies in Early Medieval Sculpture
- 4 ‘Mervoillous fu li engineres que croix fist de fust, non de pierre’: Materiality and Vernacular Theology in the Wood of the Cross Legend
- 5 The Evolution of Relational Tree-Diagrams from the Twelfth to Fourteenth Century: Visual Devices and Models of Knowledge
- 6 From Forest to Orchard: Arboreal Areas as Mnemotechnic Supports in the Middle Ages
- 7 The Vegetal Imaginary in Exemplary Literature: The Case of the Ci nous dit
- 8 Adam’s Sister: Tree Symbolism in Premodern Mystical Islamic Cosmology
- Concluding Reflections
- Appendix: Further Reading
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Uton gan on þysne weald innan, on þisses holtes hleo.
Let us go into this forest, into the shelter of this wood.
Genesis 840–1IN THE SPIRIT of the forest and the arboreal metaphors that inspire and shape our thoughts, the final remarks in this book are open-ended. This is no point of conclusion, rather, these ideas seed a wider consciousness. As leaves on a tree and trees in the forest, as parts of a greater whole, the words in this book are intended to spark new growth. In the final chapter we saw how the Universal Tree spoke to Ibn ʿArabī, telling him that its fruits ‘contain more sciences and knowledge than sound intellects and subtle hearts can bear’. Like the trees of the sun and the moon in Alexander's Letter to Aristotle, or the dream tree in The Dream of the Rood, trees like the Universal Tree can speak directly, revealing hidden wonders (and horrors). Equally, like Nebuchadnezzar's dream tree in the Book of Daniel, they can serve more obliquely as signs of things to come. The language of arboreal signs and our metaphorical use of them is what drives the collective thought presented in this book. In much the same manner that forests, trees and their wood provided the material for new human-made realities on an altogether different plane, in the world of language a metaphor provides the path to new meaning: ‘It is the in-between-languages workshop where new semantic categories are first intuited and forged’. Juxtaposing two separate ideas, a ‘metaphor consists in giving the thing a name that belongs to something else’, according to Aristotle. To understand it, one has to seek correspondence in difference – ‘to see the like is to see the same in spite of, and through, the different’. Indeed, a metaphor deals in similarities and differences. It forces a language to grow. Just as the metaphor has a privileged meaning-creating role, so too, at a material level, does the forest and its trees. Far beyond the visual, in their thoughts humans can see themselves connected to trees on deeper structural and linguistic levels.
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- Trees as Symbol and Metaphor in the Middle AgesComparative Contexts, pp. 228 - 232Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2024