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A Rediscovered Work of Jean Gerson on a Spiritual Classic: Admonitio super librum qui dicitur Clymachus de xxx gradibus perfectionis (ca. 1396–1400)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2016

Daniel Hobbins*
Affiliation:
Ohio State University

Extract

In 1425, Jean Gerson wrote a letter to his brother Jean the Celestine, in which he attacked the Arbor vitae crucifixae Jesu of Ubertino de Casale. A passage toward the end of the letter mentions a lost work of Gerson:

Finally, on this matter a short work was recently composed On the Examination of Doctrines. Another short work was also composed On the Doctrine of Raymund Lull. Moreover, certain things were written long ago On the Book that is Called Clymacus on the Thirty Steps of Perfection, whose root is the error of the Stoics [who] assert that the virtues are without feeling — that is, affected in no way through the passions. This is against the statement of the Apostle so widely experienced: “I see another law,” etc. Those who wish to make specific treatises about every single error with its origins will find no end.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fordham University 

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References

1 My thanks to Emery, Kent Jr., Ouy, Gilbert, Van Engen, John, and the two anonymous reviewers for their help and suggestions, and to David Mengel for creating the map.Google Scholar

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16 Compare in the letter to the hermit of Mont-Valérien (near Paris), Gerson's advice to the hermit to submit to the judgment of his superiors, particularly his prelate, to whom he should be “as soft mud in the hands of a potter or hot iron under the hammer of a smith” ( OC 4:8182).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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26 Subiaco, , MS 227. Musto, , “Angelo Clareno,” 220. The case for the priority of the two manuscripts of the Latin translation (MSS 112 and 213) has been assumed but, to my knowledge, not yet demonstrated. MS 112 originally belonged to the Benedictine congregation of Santa Giustina at Cassino.Google Scholar

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37 I follow here the summary of Winter's arguments in Gerwing, , Malogranatum , 2627.Google Scholar

38 See the reference in Van Engen, , Sisters and Brothers , 89 n. 23.Google Scholar

39 Ibid., 89.Google Scholar

40 Mertens, and Legrand, , Florent Radewijns , 188–89. On the foundation at Deventer, see Post, , Modern Devotion, 201–3.Google Scholar

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42 See Gruijs, A., “Fragment d'un catalogue ancien de Groenendael ayant servi à la composition du répertoire collectif de Rougecloître (Paris, Mazarine, MS 4095A, et Vienne, Ö.N.B., MS 9373),” in Essays Presented to G. I. Lieftinck , ed. Gumbert, J. P. and de Haan, M. J. M., vol. 1, Varia codicologica (Amsterdam, 1972), 75 n. 3. The fragment in question in this article belongs to the period 1496–1532/40 (ibid., 79).Google Scholar

43 Debongnie, , “Dévotion Moderne,” in Dictionnaire de Spiritualité (n. 8 above), 3:729, 741; van Woerkum, Martin, “Florent Radewijns,” ibid., 5:432. See the references in the Tractatulus devotus of Florens in Mertens and Legrand, Florent Radewijns, 128–32. For Florens's use of Climacus in the libellus “Omnes, inquit, artes,” see van Workum, , “Het libellus ‘Omnes, inquit, artes,”’ (n. 32 above), 258.Google Scholar

44 Ruusbroec's works circulate next to the Scala in one manuscript (Brussels, Bibl. Royale, MS 1319 [9320–24]) that belonged to the Benedictine house of St. Laurent at Liège. See Musto, , “Angelo Clareno,” 590–91.Google Scholar

45 Ibid., 602, 604, 608. One additional copy entered St. Victor in Paris, also a house of Canons Regular, in 1423, but the previous owner is unknown. See ibid., 603, and the more complete description of Ouy, Gilbert, Les manuscrits de l'Abbaye de Saint-Victor: Catalogue établi sur la base du répertoire de Claude de Grandrue (1514) , 2 vols. (Turnhout, 1999), 2:181–82.Google Scholar

46 For general orientation to Devout use of books, see Kock, Thomas, Die Buchkultur der Devotio moderna: Handschriftenproduktion, Literaturversorgung und Bibliotheksaufbau im Zeitalter des Medienwechsels (Frankfurt, 1999), and on acquisition of books, 54–78. On Carthusian libraries, see Hobbins, Daniel, Authorship and Publicity before Print: Jean Gerson and the Transformation of Late Medieval Learning (Philadelphia, 2009), 186.Google Scholar

47 Musto, , “Angelo Clareno,” 602. On this house, see de Grauwe, Jan, Histoire de la chartreuse du Val-Royal à Gand et de la chartreuse du Bois-Saint-Martin à Lierde-Saint-Martin (Flandre Orientale) (Salzburg, 1974).Google Scholar

48 Musto, , “Angelo Clareno,” 633–35 (checklist numbers 2, 7, and 9).Google Scholar

49 Ouy, Gilbert, “Gerson and the Celestines: How Jean Gerson and His Friend Pierre Poquet Replied to Various Questions of Discipline and Points of Conscience (ca. 1400),” in Reform and Renewal in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance , ed. Izbicki, Thomas M. and Bellitto, Christopher M. (Leiden, 2000), 113–40.Google Scholar

50 OC 2:157. Cf. Lieberman, M., “Pierre Pocquet: Dictamen de laudibus beati Joseph,” Cahiers de Joséphologie 12 (1964): 571; idem, “Saint Joseph, Jean Gerson et Pierre d'Ailly dans un manuscrit de 1464, Corrigenda et Addenda,” Cahiers de Joséphologie 20 (1972): 253–55.Google Scholar

51 Two other manuscripts owned by the Celestines of Metz have extracts of the Scala: Metz, Bibliothèque Municipale, MS 486; Metz, and, Bibliothèque Municipale, MS 498. Evidence for Celestine libraries today is much thinner than for Carthusian libraries. See Hobbins, , Authorship and Publicity , 202–3.Google Scholar

52 For the edition, see Gesamtkatalog der Wiegendrucke 9 (Stuttgart, 1991), no. 10718, which unaccountably omits the Admonitio in its listing. For a description including the Admonitio, see Catalogue général des livres imprimés de la Bibliothèque Nationale, Auteurs, vol. 59 (Paris, 1914), 776–77. I consulted copies held at the Bibliothèque nationale de France (by microfilm) and at the Huntington Library (by photocopy). The works common to both the Stuttgart manuscript and the 1475 edition are the following (according to Glorieux numbers): nos. 282, 422, 49, 56, 103, 103b, 59, 55, Admonitio super librum qui dicitur clymachus de triginta gradibus perfectionis, 37–38, 454, 401.Google Scholar

53 Autenrieth, Johanne and Fiala, Virgil Ernst, Die Handschriften der ehemaligen Hofbibliothek Stuttgart, Bd. 1.1, Codices ascetici , (Wiesbaden, 1968), 1822.Google Scholar

54 The authors did cite for comparison a poem by Gerson, , “De scala mystica.” The poem's correct title is “Schola mystica” (OC 4:105–6), and the theme has nothing at all to do with the Admonitio. .Google Scholar

55 Lieberman, M., “Chronologie gersonienne,” Romania 80 (1959): 330–31 n. 1.Google Scholar

56 The manuscript contains thirty authentic works of Gerson (including the Admonitio), the epitaph on Gerson by Jean the Celestine, and another work attributed to Gerson but whose authenticity is uncertain. This is De gravatis publicis debitis et intrantibus religionem (fols. 102v-104v), which immediately follows De gravato debitis (OC 3:313–19) in the manuscript. Further study is needed to determine the work's authenticity. The manuscript also includes a work on the celebration of masses (incorrectly attributed to Gerson), two works of Petrus Pistoris, an anonymous Meditatio de incarnatione Christi secundum testimonia sanctarum scripturarum, and finally a letter of Petrus de Rivo followed by his epitaph. These last two items are later additions to the manuscript.Google Scholar

57 It should also be noted that this section of the manuscript (fols. 183–304) includes a cluster of works with clear links to the Carthusian order: the Tractatus super Cantica Canticorum (fols. 184r–225v), which Gerson dedicated to the Carthusians, and a cluster of poems that sometimes circulated with the Tractatus in Carthusian manuscripts such as Vienna, ÖNB, Cod. lat. 1519. Cf. Hobbins, , Authorship and Publicity , 201.Google Scholar

58 No. 452, OC 9:385421.Google Scholar

59 No. 422, OC 8:565639.Google Scholar

60 Nos. 204, 167, 205, and 142, OC 4:176, 144–46, 176–77, and 104–5.Google Scholar

61 No. 400, OC 8:59.Google Scholar

62 OC 10:565–67.Google Scholar

63 No. 413, OC 8:116–33.Google Scholar

64 No. 409, OC 8:7784.Google Scholar

65 No. 411, OC 8:8597.Google Scholar

66 No. 412, OC 8:97115.Google Scholar

67 Nos. 37–38, OC 2:169–91.Google Scholar

68 No. 55, OC 2:259–63.Google Scholar

69 No. 282, OC 6:210–50.Google Scholar

70 See further Hobbins, , Authorship and Publicity (n. 46 above), 205–11.Google Scholar

71 Glorieux dated the work without explanation to “around March 1408 or 1409” ( OC 9:viii), and then to “c. March 1409” (OC 10:589). The work is undated in the manuscripts. See further Lieberman, “Chronologie gersonienne” (n. 55 above), 328–29, who prefers a later date.Google Scholar

72 On scruples and intention, the central work is De directione cordis (OC 8:97115), but the issues appear widely. See Grosse, Sven, Heilsungewissheit und Scrupulositas im späten Mittelalter: Studien zu Johannes Gerson und Gattungen der Frömmigkeitstheologie seiner Zeit (Tübingen, 1994); Catherine Brown, D., Pastor and Laity in the Theology of Jean Gerson (Cambridge, 1987), 68–72. The call for moderation is ubiquitous in Gerson (for example, OC 2:82; 9:116); see generally Hobbins, “Gerson on Lay Devotion,” in A Companion to Jean Gerson , ed. McGuire, Brian Patrick (Leiden, 2006), 41–78. Gerson's emphasis on precepts, in fact the Ten Commandments, likewise appears throughout his writings. See for example his letter to Pierre d'Ailly of 1 April 1400, where he calls for the publication of tracts to inform lay Christians about the “principal points of our religion, and especially about the commandments” (“et specialiter de praeceptis”) (OC 3:28). See also his letter of introduction to the Opus tripartitum, where he proposes that “the tenor of our law and a reminder of its commandments” be posted on tables (OC 3:72).Google Scholar

73 On the limitations of using such modifiers to date works, cf. Lieberman, , “Chronologie gersonienne,” 303–5, 326. In my view, Lieberman overstates the case when he says (326) that the only value of such adverbs is to indicate anteriority or posteriority in the relationship between different works.Google Scholar

74 OC 3:87. For Combes's dating, with reference to Glorieux, who relies on the date 1401 found in some of the manuscripts, see Essai (n. 5 above), 3:67–68, 4:299–301. Volume 3 of the Essai was published in 1959. In volume 4, published in 1972, Combes complained that Glorieux had totally ignored his arguments. See Essai 4:299 n. 133. Clearly, Glorieux was in a hurry to complete the edition. Brian Patrick McGuire does not address these issues in his recent biography, Jean Gerson and the Last Medieval Reformation (University Park, PA, 2005). (His bibliography lists only vols. 1–2 of Combes's Essai.) The dating of Gerson's works needs thorough and exhaustive reconsideration.Google Scholar

75 OC 2:62: “quemadmodum Johannes qui Climacus dicitur.” See also the reference to Climacus as “a certain skilled hermit” in a Latin sermon from 1403 (OC 5:263).Google Scholar

76 OC 2:62; 3:44, 87; 5:99, 102.Google Scholar

77 For Gerson's stay in Bruges, see Vansteenberghe, E., “Gerson à Bruges,” Revue d'histoire ecclésiastique 31 (1935): 552, and the discussion in Combes, Essai, 1:352–55. Cf. Connolly, James L., John Gerson, Reformer and Mystic (Louvain, 1928), 242–43. Gerson's interest in Flanders appears further in his address De modo se habendi tempore schismatis to those living in Flanders. See Hobbins, , Authorship and Publicity, 190, 282 n. 48.Google Scholar

78 On book production at Herne, see Warnar, Geert, Ruusbroec: Literature and Mysticism in the Fourteenth Century , trans. Webb, Diane (Leiden, 2007), 281–82. On the evidence for Gerson's visit, see Combes, , Essai, 2:39–50. Cf. Glorieux's statement in his biographic essay, OC 1:114.Google Scholar

79 This suggestion needs more development than I can give it here, but cf. the references to the “ladder of contemplation” in the Montagne de contemplation itself ( OC 7.1:26).Google Scholar

80 Combes, , Essai , 2:390422.Google Scholar

81 Ibid., 409.Google Scholar

82 Ibid., 412 n. 2. In fact the problem here appears to be the result of a scribal mistake. See below.Google Scholar

83 Ibid., 415.Google Scholar

84 Ibid., 422.Google Scholar

85 Dupin gives the following text: “ut ob tales forte dixerit Climacus, Theologiam non convenire nisi lugentibus (Dupin, L. E., ed., Joannis Gersonii Opera omnia , 4 vols. in 5 [Antwerp, 1706]). Glorieux (OC 5:102) gives instead: “ut ob tales dixerit forte Climacus theologiam non convenire lugentibus.” Cf. Combes, , Essai, 2:412 n. 2.Google Scholar

86 OC 3:44: “De gradibus pertingendi ad Deum”; 3:87: “in illo gradu scalae mysticae”; 3:293: “de xxx gradibus scalae”; 8:239: “in scala triginta graduum.” Google Scholar

87 OC 3:293; Combes, , Essai, 1:652–64.Google Scholar

88 Ethica Nicomachea , ed. Gauthier, Renatus Antonius, in Aristoteles Latinus 26, 4, Translatio Grosseteste (Leiden, 1973), 399, lines 19–21: “Ideoque determinant virtutes inpassibilitates quasdam et quietes. Non bene autem, quoniam simpliciter dicunt, sed ut non oportet, et quando non oportet, et quecumque alia apponuntur.” On Grosseteste's translation, see Georg Wieland, “The Reception and Interpretation of Aristotle's Ethics,” in The Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy: From the Rediscovery of Aristotle to the Disintegration of Scholasticism 1100–1600 , ed. Kretzmann, Norman, Kenny, Anthony, and Pinborg, Jan (Cambridge, 1982), 659–60.Google Scholar

89 The phrase does not appear in the most widely diffused florilegium of Aristotle, the Auctoritates Aristotelis. A complete study would examine the many other florilegia, on which see Hamesse, Jacqueline, Les Auctoritates Aristotelis, un florilège médiéval: Étude historique et édition critique (Louvain, 1974), 1112, and the basic study, Grabmann, M., Methoden und Hilfsmittel des Aristotelesstudiums im Mittelalter (Munich, 1939).Google Scholar

90 In octo libros physicorum Aristotelis expositio , ed. Maggiòlo, M. (Turin, 1954), no. 921 (7, 6): “Stoici enim dixerunt virtutes esse impassibilitates quaedam”; Quaestiones disputatae , ed. Bazzi, P. et al., 8th ed., 2 vols. (Turin, 1949), 2:74 (“De malo,” qu. 12, art. 1, ad. 13). Lambert of Cologne (d. 1499) drew on Aquinas for his own commentary on the Physics: “virtutes aut sunt quedam impassibilitates secundum Stoicos, id est remotiones omnium passionum ab anima, vel sunt quedam moderationes passionum anime” (cited in Lexicon Latinitatis Nederlandicae Medii Aevi 4 [Leiden, 1990], p. 2344, col. I 132).Google Scholar

91 Summa theologiae, Ia-IIae, q. 59, art. 2. See the Blackfriars edition, Summa theologiae, vol. 23 (New York, 1964), 86. For Aquinas's position on the passions, see White, Kevin, “The Passions of the Soul (Ia IIae, qq. 22–48),” in The Ethics of Aquinas , ed. Pope, Stephen J. (Washington, DC, 2002), 103–15 (with direct reference to the Stoics on 106). And on virtues, see in the same volume Bonnie Kent, “Habits and Virtues (Ia IIae, qq. 49–70),” 116–30.Google Scholar

92 Buridanus, Johannes, Quaestiones super X libros Ethicorum (Paris, 1513; repr., Frankfurt, 1968), bk. 2, qu. 10 (fol. 30r): “Decimo queritur Utrum virtutes morales sint impassibilitates, hoc est utrum excludunt passiones.” Google Scholar

93 See further Hobbins, , Authorship and Publicity (n. 46 above), 4042.Google Scholar

94 On Gerson's notion of “safe teaching” at Paris, see ibid., 4045.Google Scholar

95 Combes, , Essai , 1:404–15.Google Scholar

96 Doctoris ecstatici D. Dionysii Cartusiani Opera omnia , 42 vols. (Monstrolii, 1896–1913), 28:46.Google Scholar

97 Ibid., 48: “Si quis mundum odivit, iste tristitiam aufugit. Si quis vero ad aliquid visibilium possidet passibiliter affectionem, nondum a tristitia est redemptus. Quomodo enim non tristabitur saltern super privatione dilecti?” Google Scholar

98 Colish, Marcia L., The Stoic Tradition from Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages, 2, Stoicism in Christian Latin Thought through the Sixth Century (Leiden, 1985), 7072 (quotation on 70).Google Scholar

99 Ibid., 77.Google Scholar

100 Ibid., 79.Google Scholar

101 On what follows, see the excellent overview in Lapidge, Michael, “The Stoic Inheritance,” in A History of Twelfth-Century Western Philosophy , ed. Dronke, Peter (Cambridge, 1988), 8899.Google Scholar

102 Ibid., 91. Lapidge (92–95) discusses the works of Cicero and Seneca and their availability in the West during the twelfth century.Google Scholar

103 Ibid., 9799.Google Scholar

104 On these matters, see further Bell, David N., “Apatheia: The Convergence of Byzantine and Cistercian Spirituality,” Cîteaux: commentarii cistercienses 38 (1987): 141–64, and Sheridan, Mark, “The Controversy over APATHEIA: Cassian's Sources and His Use of Them,” Studia Monastica 39 (1997): 287–310.Google Scholar

105 On the shift itself, see Fulton, Rachel, From Judgment to Passion: Devotion to Christ and the Virgin Mary, 800–1200 (New York, 2002).Google Scholar

106 OC 7.2:449519.Google Scholar

107 For a fine overview of the literature, see Bestul, Thomas H., Texts of the Passion: Latin Devotional Literature and Medieval Society (Philadelphia, 1996).Google Scholar

108 OC 7.2:852.Google Scholar

109 See for example OC 5:350–51 (sermon from 1416); 7.1:68, 76 (work written in 1413); 7.2:952–53 (sermon from 1396 or 1402).Google Scholar

110 Cf. Erasmus, , who later styled Jerome theologus optimus (Hasse, Hans-Peter, “Ambrosius Blarer liest Hieronymus: Blarers handschriftliche Eintragungen in seinem Exemplar der Hieronymusausgabe des Erasmus von Rotterdam [Basel 1516],” in Auctoritas Patrum: Zur Rezeption der Kirchenväter im 15. und 16. Jahrhundert/Contributions on the Reception of the Church Fathers in the 15th and 16th Century , ed. Grane, Leif, Schindler, Alfred, and Wriedt, Markus [Mainz, 1993], 4849).Google Scholar

111 McGinn, Bernard, The Flowering of Mysticism: Men and Women in the New Mysticism (1200–1350) (New York, 1998), 251.Google Scholar

112 Idem, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany (1300–1500) (New York, 2005), 164–93; for Eckhart's vision as “democratic,” ibid., 425.Google Scholar

113 OC 2:5562. See further Hobbins, , Authorship and Publicity (n. 46 above), 46.Google Scholar

114 OC 7.1:55: “La tierce maniere d'avoir grasce est par union, comme eust saint Pol, li excellens contemplatifs. Mais de ceste maniere ne suis je mie digne d'en ouvrir ma bouche; ie la laisse aux plus grans.” Google Scholar

115 Gerson's primary treatment in Latin is De theologia mystica, to which Combes gave major treatment. See his La théologie mystique de Gerson: Profil de son évolution , 2 vols. (Rome, 1963–64). On Gerson's revisions, see further Daniel Hobbins, “Editing and Circulating Letters in the Fifteenth Century: Jean Gerson, Uberius quam necesse, 10 November 1422,” Bulletin de philosophie médiévale 46 (2004): 179–84. Combes also produced a critical edition: Combes, André, ed., Ioannis Carlerii de Gerson De mystica theologia (Lugano, 1958). Or see OC 3:250–92, 8:18–47. Gerson's major treatment in French is La montagne de contemplation (OC 7.1:16–55), in which he consciously avoided treating the final stage of the mystical ascent.Google Scholar

116 For an example from late in Gerson's career involving a Carthusian who had adopted an unusually strict dietary regime, see OC 2:306–8, 311, and the discussion in Hobbins, “Beyond the Schools: New Writings and the Social Imagination of Jean Gerson” (PhD diss., University of Notre Dame, 2002), 333–39.Google Scholar

117 Doctoris ecstatici D. Dionysii Cartusiani Opera omnia (n. 96 above), 28:4647; Ladder , trans. Luibheid, and Russell, (n. 8 above), 81.Google Scholar

118 For Gerson's feeling that “not everyone is suited to contemplation,” see his comments on masters and on monks: on masters, OC 2:21: “Consideretur in quanta copia sunt magistri ad contemplationem forte minus idonei qui omnibus agendis in officio vigilantius, libentius atque felicius deservirent”; on monks, OC 2:307: “Ceterum super illo monacho qui se debilitat in cibo et potu sub praesumptione contemplationis obtinendae, ad quam paucissimi sunt habiles et indigni.” Gerson's remarks on the Carthusians appear in his letter to Guillaume Minaud in 1422 (OC 2:236): “Religio Carthusiensis non attendit principaliter qualitatem unius personae singularis sed introeuntium dispositiones, complexiones, cognitiones et affectiones quemadmodum ut in pluribus eveniunt. Cujus ratio est quoniam reperiuntur aliqui penitus indispositi nedum ad finem contemplationis consequendum in hac vita sed etiam ad statuta ordinis capienda per intellectum et exsequenda per affectum. Sunt alii quibus jam non opus est praeambulis exercitiis contentis in hac religione ut ad contemplationem proveniant, quoniam aliunde, partim proprio studio et exercitio, et partim, immo maxime divino auxilio, provecti sunt ad arcem contemplationis faciliter ascendendum. Rara avis in terra fatemur; non tamen desperandum quod nulla. Sunt alii qui disciplinati per observationes ordinis mortificant vitia et naturam custodiunt, qui absque eis vivendo saeculariter dum fovere putarent naturam, vitia nutrirent; immo deinceps ut evenit, naturam per excessum corrumperent. Et quoniam inveniuntur ut communius homines hujus religionis professionem arripientes qui se tales reputant, propterea sunt datae regulae aliae quam quae solam contemplationem respiciunt; quoniam multo plures sunt apti regulis hujusmodi quam contemplationis altitudini, praesertim ab initio et in fervore concupiscentiarum quibus non edomitis contemplari quaereret homo nedum inutiliter, nedum arroganter, sed in magnam saepe perniciem.” Google Scholar

119 For an edition see Ouy, Gilbert, Gerson bilingue: Les deux rédactions, latine et française, de quelques oeuvres du chancelier parisien (Paris, 1998). On the work's impact, see Bast, Robert James, Honor Your Fathers: Catechisms and the Emergence of a Patriarchal Ideology in Germany, 1400–1600 (Leiden, 1997), 13–28.Google Scholar

120 On this notion in Gerson, see Hobbins, Daniel, “Jean Gerson's Authentic Tract on Joan of Arc: Super facto puellae et credulitate sibi praestanda (14 May 1429),” Mediaeval Studies 67 (2005): 111 n. 56. Gerson does use a similar phrase in De passionibus animae, immediately after the passage in which he cites the Stoic formula “virtutes sunt impassibilitates.” He refers next to the Epicureans, who go to the other extreme and say that “all passions are beautiful and best.” “But Aristotle,” Gerson concludes, “as if taking a middle course [medium iter], denied that all passions are good, because many come before and impede reason; he nonetheless denied that they should all be judged bad and shameful, those, that is, ruled by reason.” (OC 9:8: “Ceterum Aristoteles quasi medium iter peragens negavit passiones omnes bonas esse, quia multae praeveniunt et impediunt rationem; negavit nihilominus omnes judicandas esse malas et turpes, eas videlicet quae ratione regerentur.”) CrossRefGoogle Scholar

121 MS 2043 (2282). I have not examined this manuscript. For descriptions, see Musto, , “Angelo Clareno” (n. 8 above), 592; van den Gheyn, J. et al., Catalogue des manuscrits de la Bibliothèque royale de Belgique, vol. 3, Théologie (Brussels, 1903), 264. The other two early manuscripts mentioned above, Charleville, BM, MS 132, and Paris, Bibliothèque Mazarine, MS 658, both contain the Liber ad pastorem. Google Scholar

122 On devotional excess, see Hobbins, , “Gerson on Lay Devotion” (n. 72 above), 6275.Google Scholar

123 libri huius] huius libri B. Google Scholar

124 PL 22:1147, “Epistola CXXXIII ad Ctesiphontem.” Google Scholar

125 Ps. 75:3.Google Scholar

126 Ps. 48:13.Google Scholar

127 Ps. 62:4.Google Scholar

128 1 Cor. 15:10.Google Scholar

129 Ps. 75:3.Google Scholar

130 Ps. 48:13.Google Scholar

131 Ps. 62:4.Google Scholar

132 1 Cor. 15:10.Google Scholar

133 After this article went to press, I found a second MS of the Admonitio, ÖNB Cod. Ser. n. 12788, fols. 433v-434r. Collation showed that this copy is insignificant for the present edition.Google Scholar