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‘Exodus’ and the ‘Herba Humilis’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2016
Extract
Sic eum anima, quern superbiens intus reliquerat, foris humilem invenit, imitatura ejus humilitatem visibilem, et ad invisibilem altitudinem reditura.
De libero arbitrio 3.10.30
Although the text of the Old English Exodus poem, as C. L. Wrenn remarked, is one ‘whose almost every line contains a crux or a challenge,’ certain passages of the poem present especially numerous and complex difficulties. One such passage is lines 135–153, immediately following the description of the Israelites’ advance through the third and fourth mansiones and preceding the description of Pharaoh's pursuit:
- 135 Đær on fyrd hyra færspell becwom,
- oht inlende. Egsan stodan,
- wælgryre weroda; wræcmon gebad
- laðne lastweard, se ðe him lange ær
- eðelleasum onnied gescraf,
- Type
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- Copyright © Fordham University Press
References
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48 The Old English Exodus 77.Google Scholar
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51 Irving, , The Old English Exodus 7, suggests that ‘on the whole perhaps 50 lines is a fair guess at the amount of missing material.’ He is assuming that originally the gathering was complete and that the two leaves now lost once contained part of the text, whether their pages were filled with writing or were to some extent left blank for illustration. But it is conceivable that in copying at this point the scribe spoiled a leaf beyond the possibility of correction and therefore excised it, beginning his copying again on the following page. The text would then have been complete but in a gathering of seven leaves instead of eight. The odd leaf, containing some of the text but possibly some blank space as well, might then have fallen out at a later time. It so happens that the missing leaves were the fourth and fifth leaves of the gathering, that is, the inner leaves, as Irving's diagram, p. 6, makes clear. But these were the leaves which, if either were a half-sheet, might have been the more liable to fall out. By this hypothesis it might be reasonable to estimate even fewer than fifty lines as the amount of text now lost. See Ker, N. R., Catalogue of Manuscripts Containing Anglo-Saxon (Oxford 1957) xxiv pars. (c) and (b), in which he notes that when a pair of half-sheets was used (i.e., deliberately) in place of one full sheet, the half-sheets are ‘rarely the first and eighth or the fourth and fifth leaves, which would be more likely to fall out.’Google Scholar
52 Mitchell, Bruce, A Guide to Old English (2nd ed.; Oxford 1968) 83.Google Scholar
53 The Junius Manuscript 205.Google Scholar
54 The Old English Exodus 78.Google Scholar
55 In Review of English Studies n.s. 6 (1955) 185–186; and Medium ævum 25 (1956) 32.Google Scholar
56 Thorpe, Benjamin, Cædmon's Metrical Paraphrase of Parts of the Holy Scriptures, in Anglo-Saxon (London 1832) 187. Cf. Bouterwek, Karl W., Cædmon's des Angelsachsen biblische Dichtungen 1 (Gütersloh 1854) 117, 250, 319. For Irving's view see ‘New Notes on the Old English Exodus’ (note 47 supra) 303–304, where he abandons Kock's proposal and suggests ymb ane twige, taking neuter twig as a scribal alteration of feminine twigu. Google Scholar
57 Exodus, 7.19–20, 8.17, 9.23, and 10.13.Google Scholar
58 Origen, , In Exodum homilia 4.6: ‘Virga ergo per quam geruntur haec omnia, per quam Aegyptus subjicitur et Pharao superatur, crux Christi sit, per quam mundus hic vincitur, et princeps hujus mundi cum principatibus et potestatibus triumphatur’ (PG 12.321). This interpretation is repeated by pseudo-Bede, In Pentateuchum commentarii — Exodus 7 (PL 91.301); Hrabanus, , Commentaria in Exodum 1.12 (PL 108.34); and the Glossa ordinaria, Liber Exodus 7 (PL 113.203). Cf. Isidore, , De Veteri et Novo Testamento quæstiones — In Exodum 12 (PL 83.292).Google Scholar
59 Catechetical Lectures, 13.3, trans. Gifford, Edwin Hamilton, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers Second Series (New York 1890–1900) VII 82. Cf. Cat. Lect. 1.3; 4.13–14; 13.36; 17.35–36.Google Scholar
60 In Exodum homilia 6.8 (PG 12.337). The comment is repeated by Hrabanus in the Commentaria in Exodum 2.4 (PL 108.72–73).Google Scholar
61 The belief is illustrated very clearly in Old English poetry and prose. In Juliana lines 490–494 the devil confesses that sume, ϸ a ic funde / butan godes tacne, gymelease, / ungebletsade, ϸ a ic bealdlice / ϸ urh mislic cwealm minum hondum / searoponcum slog; in Andreas lines 1337–1340 the devils, syÐÐan hie oncneowon Cristes rode / on his mægwlite, mære tacen, / wurdon hie Ða acle on ϸ am onfenge, / forhte, afærde, ond on fleam numen. For fairly explicit statements in the prose see The Bückling Homilies 47, 91, 243; ælfric's Lives of Saints, ed. Skeat, Walter W. (EETS 76; London 1881) 76, 132; (EETS 82, 1885) 374, 466, 470; (EETS 94, 1890) 12, 20, 152–154; (EETS 114, 1900) 264–268; The Homilies of ælfric (note 17 supra) I 466, 534; Legends of the Holy Rood, ed. Morris, Richard (EETS 46; London 1871) 17; The Homilies of Wulfstan, ed. Bethurum, Dorothy (Oxford 1957) 172, 176–177; also 169 (Latin). On the sign of the cross generally in early Christianity see Ludwig Eisenhofer, Handbuch der katholischen Liturgik (Freiburg i. B. 1932) I 273–281.Google Scholar
62 PL 36.593. Google Scholar
63 2.41.62 (PL 34.64). Google Scholar
64 PL 79.587. Cf. Moralia in Iob 6.37.56: ‘Hyssopus quippe interna nostra mundare consuevit’ (PL 75.761); and Paterius, Expositio Veteris et Noui Testamenti — Super Numeros: ‘Quid in hyssopo, nisi mansueti cordis humilitas designatur?’ (PL 79.767). Google Scholar
65 PL 83.416. Google Scholar
66 PL 35.1952. In his Quæstiones in Heptateuchum 4.33, Augustine takes hyssop to mean fides (PL 34.734 and 736). Google Scholar
67 See Daniélou, , The Bible and the Liturgy (note 38 supra) 162–176, for a number of references.Google Scholar
68 The ‘testimony’ is briefly discussed in Smalley, Beryl, The Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages (2nd ed.; Oxford 1952) 34.Google Scholar
69 1.11 (PL 23.226). Cf. Tractates de Psalmo 83 (CCL 78.2.106–107). In the Breviarium in Psalmos, pseudo-Jerome says of Psalm 50.9 that ‘sicut enim hyssopus terrenus curandis pulmonibus aptus est, ut avertat inflationem: ita coelesti quis respersus hyssopo: id est, humilitate cordis, ab omni superbiae malignitate purgatur’ (PL 26.973). Google Scholar
70 4.2 (PL 16.437; cf. PL 16.399–400 and PL 14.827). Google Scholar
71 Etymologiae 17.9 (PL 82.628); Quaestiones in Vetus Testamentum — In Numeros 15 (PL 83.349); De fide Catholica contra Judaeos 1.40 (PL 83.487).Google Scholar
72 PL 50.746. Google Scholar
73 PL 70.364. Google Scholar
74 Alcuin: Expositio in Psalmos Poenitentiales (PL 100.584–585); Commentaria in Ioannem 7.40 (PL 100.985); Tractatus super Epistulam ad Hebraeos 9 (PL 100.1074). Hrabanus: De universo 19.8 (PL 111.527–528); Commentaria in Exodum 1.23 (PL 108.52–53); Expositio in Leviticum 4.6 (PL 108.392); Enarrationes in Librum Numerorum 2.24 (PL 108.704–705 and 709); Expositio in Epistolam ad Hebraeos 9 (PL 112.775). See also Walafrid Strabo, Epitome commentariorum Rabani in Leviticum 14 (PL 114.822); and Haymo of Auxerre, Expositio in Epistulam ad Hebraeos 9 (PL 117.885). Also pseudo-Bede, Explanatio in Secundum Librum Mosis 12 (PL 91.308); Explanatio in Tertium Librum Mosis 14 (PL 91.348); Explanation Quartum Librum Mosis 19 (PL 91.367–368); Quaestiones super Numeros 16 (PL 93.403); Interpretatio Psalterii artis cantilenae (PL 93.1101); and (Alcuin?) In S. Joannis Evangelium expositio 19 (PL 92.915). For the Glossa ordinaria see PL 113.219, 336, 412, 583, and 919. References to the meaning of hyssop among the Greek Fathers are perhaps of less immediate importance in this paper, but a few may be mentioned: Origen, Selecta in Leviticum (PG 12.404); In Leviticum homilia 8.10 (PG 12.503); Procopius of Gaza, Commentarii in Leviticum and in Numeros (PG 87.739–742 and 847–850); Hesychius, Commentarius in Leviticum 4.14 (PG 93.952); Fragmenta in Psalmos (PG 93.1201–1202); Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures 3.1, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers Second Series VII 14. Google Scholar
75 Sacramentarium Gelasianum 3.76 (PL 74.1227); and Sancti Gregorii Magni Liber Sacramentorum (PL 78.156). On the aspersio see Eisenhofer, Handbuch (note 61 supra) I 476–480; on the penitential psalms (6, 31, 37, 50, 101, 129, 142) see 166–167.Google Scholar
76 2.16.24 (PL 34.47–48). It is interesting to find hyssop specified as an ingredient in several Anglo-Saxon prescriptions for lung and chest ailments, though it might be unwise to infer from such evidence that the Anglo-Saxon leech had much familiarity with the plant itself. See Oswald Cockayne, Leechdoms, Wortcunning, and Starcraft of Early England (London 1864–1866) I 374, 378; III 16, 22, and perhaps 124. The recipes from Lacnunga (Cockayne III 16, 22) are thought by J. H. G. Grattan and Charles Singer to have been derived from Graeco-Roman medicine; see Anglo-Saxon Magic and Medicine (Oxford 1952) 18, 96 n. 1, 114–115, and 120–121. It might be mentioned finally that botanically the biblical ‘hyssop’ was not hyssopus officinalis. Some believe it to have been a species of origanum. See Leopold Fonck, Streifzüge durch die biblische Flora (Biblische Studien 5; Freiburg i.B. 1900) 105–109. Google Scholar
77 Moralia in Iob 4.23.42 (PL 75.657).Google Scholar
78 Sermo 40 2 (PL 54.269).Google Scholar
79 Sermo 36 2 (PL 54.254).Google Scholar
80 2.18.32 and 32.24.51 (PL 75.571 and 76.668). Google Scholar
81 De Trinitate 4.10 (PL 42.896).Google Scholar
82 Enarratio in Psalmum 88 11 (PL 37.1126–1127).Google Scholar
83 14.13 (PL 41.421). Google Scholar
84 In his commentary on Hebrews Alcuin observes that ‘hyssopus enim herba humilis est et in petris nascens: humilitas Christi significatur per hanc herbam et fortitudo, qua interiora nostra purgantur. Nam hoc genere herbae pulmonum vitia purgari solent’ (PL 100.1074). The comment is repeated by Hrabanus (PL 112.775) and Haymo of Auxerre (PL 117.885). On the courage of the Israelites and on the meaning and scope of lines 54–62 see Vickrey, ‘Exodus and the Battle in the Sea’ (note 6 supra) 132–140. Google Scholar
85 Line 307 reads ‘Nalles hige gehyrdon haliges lare.’ Krapp, The Junius Manuscript 210, seems to regard hige as the dative of the noun; he translates ‘scorned not in mind.’ But the synonymy elsewhere of courage and obedience suggests the possibility of taking hige as accusative: ‘Not at all did (they) despise courage, the counsel of the holy one.’ By this view a comma should follow gehyrdon. Google Scholar
86 The MS reads an paÐas line 58, án mód line 203, án dgne line 304, and án getrum line 334. Google Scholar
87 Elements evidently not alliterating are lost in lines 243b, 288a, and 514a. In line 118a, probably the second element of a compound is lost. Alliterating elements are certainly lost in lines 340a, 503a, 574b, and probably in 487a, on which see Robinson, ‘Notes on the Old English Exodus’ (note 47 supra) 368–370. Google Scholar
88 Krapp, , The Junius Manuscript xxiii, observes that ‘short vowels frequently have accent marks.’ It is interesting to note the same feature in Daniel line 503 twígum. Google Scholar
89 King Alfred's West-Saxon Version of Gregory's Pastoral Care, ed. Sweet, Henry (EETS 45; London 1871) 236–237, 242–243; and ælfric's Lives of Saints (EETS 76, note 61 supra) 130, 202. Note also anfealdnes in the Pastoral Care 236–237, 242–245.Google Scholar
90 Wright, Thomas, Anglo-Saxon and Old English Vocabularies, ed. Wülcker, Richard Paul (2nd ed.; London 1884) I 485. This is from a glossary in MS Cotton Cleopatra A iii.Google Scholar
91 Pseudo-Bede, , whose comment on Exodus 12.22 is one of the few to mention the fasciculus, makes the standard remark that ‘hyssopus autem herba est humilis; quia pectus purgat, figuram Christi tenet. Humilis in assumptione carnis,’ and then adds, “Fasciculus hyssopi,” id est, credulitas Incarnationis Christi et divinitatis illius corporibus inesse debet’ (PL 91.308). Although I take the reconstruction ymb an[feald] twig to be by far the most likely interpretation, a few others can be mentioned. One is that an earlier MS read ymb ysopan twig and that ysop- was lost in copying. Another is that the text had something like ymb ysopan — cf. ϸurh ysopon in the Old English Psalm 50 line 73 — and that a gloss an twig replaced ysopan. Neither of these explanations is perhaps very likely. It is possible too that instead of anfeald the reading was anlic or maybe even ansund. Perhaps it was a form in an; not otherwise attested. Of attested forms, anfeald seems to me the likeliest.Google Scholar
92 The Old English Exodus 78.Google Scholar
93 Cf. lines 49–53: ‘Swa ϸæs fæsten dreah fela missera, / ealdwerige, Egypta folc, / ϸ æs ϸe hie wideferÐ wyrnan ϸohton / Moyses magum, gif hie metod lete, / on langne lust leofes siÐes.’ For a discussion of this passage see Vickrey, ‘Exodus and the Tenth Plague’ (note 6 supra) 46–52. Referral of ϸ æt feorhlean to the requital which the Egyptians hope to give on their spildsiÐ line 153 seems precluded by ϸæt. Google Scholar
94 See the comment in pseudo-Bede (PL 91.307). Google Scholar
95 Dante, from the famous letter to Can Grande della Scala, in Dorothy Sayers, L., trans., The Comedy of Dante Alighieri: Cantica I, Hell (Penguin Books 1949) 15. Line 146 his, insofar as it refers to anyone literally, I take to refer to Moses. Figurally it is Christ. His mégwinum ‘expresses the moral sense,’ and in the moral sense lines 146–147 anticipate lines 148–153. Accordingly, his mægwinum, if there is any doubt, is explained by Moyses leode line 152. In a way then it would be appropriate to punctuate with a colon after fræton. Alternatively, perhaps there was some reference to Moses toward the end of the lines now lost, or just possibly the allusion to hyssop, the use of which Moses had commanded and which signified the humility of Christ, was thought adequate to identify his. Google Scholar
96 For evidence of early medieval understanding of in medias res, see Leyerle, John, ‘The Interlace Structure of Beowulf,’ University of Toronto Quarterly 37 (1967) 5–7, who cites the comment on Ars poetica lines 42–45 found in the eighth-century Scholia Vindobonensia ad Horatii Artem poeticam ed. Zechmeister, Josephus (Vienna 1877) 4–5. Leyerle also notes that Alcuin's poetical life of St. Willibrord begins in medias res. It would seem possible that the Exodus poet was aware of the classical precedent for beginning the main narrative this way.Google Scholar
97 The Old Engish Exodus 30, 81.Google Scholar
98 See Isidore's comment in De Veteri et Novo Testamento quaestiones — In Exodum 14 (PL 83.294). This follows Origen, In Exodum homilia 4.7 (PG 12.323). Cf. pseudo-Bede (PL 91.303), Hrabanus (PL 108.43), and the Glossa ordinaria (PL 113.216). Google Scholar
99 For references see especially Rivière, The Doctrine of the Atonement (note 16 supra) II 163–169, 187–192. Google Scholar
100 De Trinitate 8.5 (PL 42.952).Google Scholar