__________________________________________________________________
Title: Historia Calamitatum: The Story of My Misfortunes
Creator(s): Abelard, Peter
CCEL Subjects: All; Biography
__________________________________________________________________
HISTORIA CALAMITATUM
THE STORY OF MY MISFORTUNES
An Autobiography by Peter Abélard
Translated by Henry Adams Bellows
Introduction by Ralph Adams Cram
__________________________________________________________________
INTRODUCTION
The “Historia Calamitatum” of Peter Abélard is one of those human
documents, out of the very heart of the Middle Ages, that illuminates
by the glow of its ardour a shadowy period that has been made even more
dusky and incomprehensible by unsympathetic commentators and the
ill-digested matter of “source-books.” Like the “Confessions” of St.
Augustine it is an authentic revelation of personality and, like the
latter, it seems to show how unchangeable is man, how consistent unto
himself whether he is of the sixth century or the twelfth—or indeed of
the twentieth century. “Evolution” may change the flora and fauna of
the world, or modify its physical forms, but man is always the same and
the unrolling of the centuries affects him not at all. If we can assume
the vivid personality, the enormous intellectual power and the clear,
keen mentality of Abélard and his contemporaries and immediate
successors, there is no reason why “The Story of My Misfortunes” should
not have been written within the last decade.
They are large assumptions, for this is not a period in world history
when the informing energy of life expresses itself through such
qualities, whereas the twelfth century was of precisely this nature.
The antecedent hundred years had seen the recovery from the barbarism
that engulfed Western Europe after the fall of Rome, and the generation
of those vital forces that for two centuries were to infuse society
with a vigour almost unexampled in its potency and in the things it
brought to pass. The parabolic curve that describes the trajectory of
Mediaevalism was then emergent out of “chaos and old night” and Abélard
and his opponent, St. Bernard, rode high on the mounting force in its
swift and almost violent ascent.
Pierre du Pallet, yclept Abélard, was born in 1079 and died in 1142,
and his life precisely covers the period of the birth, development and
perfecting of that Gothic style of architecture which is one of the
great exemplars of the period. Actually, the Norman development
occupied the years from 1050 to 1125 while the initiating and
determining of Gothic consumed only fifteen years, from Bury, begun in
1125, to Saint-Denis, the work of Abbot Suger, the friend and partisan
of Abélard, in 1140. It was the time of the Crusades, of the founding
and development of schools and universities, of the invention or
recovery of great arts, of the growth of music, poetry and romance. It
was the age of great kings and knights and leaders of all kinds, but
above all it was the epoch of a new philosophy, refounded on the newly
revealed corner stones of Plato and Aristotle, but with a new content,
a new impulse and a new method inspired by Christianity.
All these things, philosophy, art, personality, character, were the
product of the time, which, in its definiteness and consistency, stands
apart from all other epochs in history. The social system was that of
feudalism, a scheme of reciprocal duties, privileges and obligations as
between man and man that has never been excelled by any other system
that society has developed as its own method of operation. As Dr. De
Wulf has said in his illuminating book “Philosophy and Civilization in
the Middle Ages” (a volume that should be read by any one who wishes
rightly to understand the spirit and quality of Mediaevalism), “the
feudal sentiment par excellence . . . is the sentiment of the value and
dignity of the individual man. The feudal man lived as a free man; he
was master in his own house; he sought his end in himself; he was—and
this is a scholastic expression,—propter seipsum existens: all feudal
obligations were founded upon respect for personality and the given
word.”
Of course this admirable scheme of society with its guild system of
industry, its absence of usury in any form and its just sense of
comparative values, was shot through and through with religion both in
faith and practice. Catholicism was universally and implicitly
accepted. Monasticism had redeemed Europe from barbarism and Cluny had
freed the Church from the yoke of German imperialism. This unity and
immanence of religion gave a consistency to society otherwise
unobtainable, and poured its vitality into every form of human thought
and action.
It was Catholicism and the spirit of feudalism that preserved men from
the dangers inherent in the immense individualism of the time. With
this powerful and penetrating coördinating force men were safe to go
about as far as they liked in the line of individuality, whereas today,
for example, the unifying force of a common and vital religion being
absent and nothing having been offered to take its place, the result of
a similar tendency is egotism and anarchy. These things happened in the
end in the case of Mediaevalism when the power and the influence of
religion once began to weaken, and the Renaissance and Reformation
dissolved the fabric of a unified society. Thereafter it became
necessary to bring some order out of the spiritual, intellectual and
physical chaos through the application of arbitrary force, and so came
absolutism in government, the tyranny of the new intellectualism, the
Catholic Inquisition and the Puritan Theocracy.
In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, however, the balance is justly
preserved, though it was but an unstable equilibrium, and therefore
during the time of Abélard we find the widest diversity of speculation
and freedom of thought which continue unhampered for more than a
hundred years. The mystical school of the Abbey of St. Victor in Paris
follows one line (perhaps the most nearly right of all though it was
submerged by the intellectual force and vivacity of the Scholastics)
with Hugh of St. Victor as its greatest exponent. The Franciscans and
Dominicans each possessed great schools of philosophy and dogmatic
theology, and in addition there were a dozen individual line of
speculation, each vitalized by some one personality, daring, original,
enthusiastic. This prodigious mental and spiritual activity was largely
fostered by the schools, colleges and universities that had suddenly
appeared all over Europe. Never was such activity along educational
lines. Almost every cathedral had its school, and many of the abbeys as
well, as for example, in France alone, Cluny, Citeaux and Bec, St.
Martin of Tours, Laon, Chartres, Rheims and Paris. To these schools
students poured in from all over the world in numbers mounting to many
thousands for such as Paris for example, and the mutual rivalries were
intense and sometimes disorderly. Groups of students would choose their
own masters and follow them from place to place, even subjecting them
to discipline if in their opinion they did not live up to the
intellectual mark they had set as their standard. As there was not only
one religion and one social system, but one universal language as well,
this gathering from all the four quarters of Europe was perfectly
possible, and had much to do with the maintenance of that unity which
marked society for three centuries.
At the time of Abélard the schools of Chartres and Paris were at the
height of their fame and power. Fulbert, Bernard and Thierry, all of
Chartres, had fixed its fame for a long period, and at Paris Hugh and
Richard of St. Victor and William of Champeaux were names to conjure
with, while Anselm of Laon, Adelard of Bath, Alan of Lille, John of
Salisbury, Peter Lombard, were all from time to time students or
teachers in one of the schools of the Cathedral, the Abbey of St.
Victor or Ste. Geneviève.
Earlier in the Middle Ages the identity of theology and philosophy had
been proclaimed, following the Neo-Platonic and Augustinian theory, and
the latter (cf. Peter Damien and Duns Scotus Eriugena) was even reduced
to a position that made it no more than the obedient handmaid of
theology. In the eleventh century however, St. Anselm had drawn a clear
distinction between faith and reason, and thereafter theology and
philosophy were generally accepted as individual but allied sciences,
both serving as lines of approach to truth but differing in their
method. Truth was one and therefore there could be no conflict between
the conclusions reached after different fashions. In the twelfth
century Peter of Blois led a certain group called “rigourists” who
still looked askance at philosophy, or rather at the intellectual
methods by which it proceeded, and they were inclined to condemn it as
“the devil’s art,” but they were on the losing side and John of
Salisbury, Alan of Lille, Gilbert de la Porrée and Hugh of St. Victor
prevailed in their contention that philosophers were “humanae videlicet
sapientiae amatores,” while theologians were “divinae scripturae
doctores.”
Cardinal Mercier, himself the greatest contemporary exponent of
Scholastic philosophy, defines philosophy as “the science of the
totality of things.” The twelfth century was a time when men were
striving to see phenomena in this sense and established a great
rational synthesis that should yet be in full conformity with the
dogmatic theology of revealed religion. Abélard was one of the most
enthusiastic and daring of these Mediaeval thinkers, and it is not
surprising that he should have found himself at issue not only with the
duller type of theologians but with his philosophical peers themselves.
He was an intellectual force of the first magnitude and a master of
dialectic; he was also an egotist through and through, and a man of
strong passions. He would and did use his logical faculty and his
mastery of dialectic to justify his own desires, whether these were for
carnal satisfaction or the maintenance of an original intellectual
concept. It was precisely this danger that aroused the fears of the
“rigourists” and in the light of succeeding events in the domain of
intellectualism it is impossible to deny that there was some
justification for their gloomy apprehensions. In St. Thomas Aquinas
this intellectualizing process marked its highest point and beyond
there was no margin of safety. He himself did not overstep the verge of
danger, but after him this limit was overpassed. The perfect balance
between mind and spirit was achieved by Hugh of St. Victor, but
afterwards the severance began and on the one side was the unwholesome
hyper-spiritualization of the Rhenish mystics, on the other the false
intellectualism of Descartes, Kant and the entire modern school of
materialistic philosophy. It was the clear prevision of this inevitable
issue that made of St. Bernard not only an implacable opponent of
Abélard but of the whole system of Scholasticism as well. For a time he
was victorious. Abélard was silenced and the mysticism of the
Victorines triumphed, only to be superseded fifty years later when the
two great orders, Dominican and Franciscan, produced their triumphant
protagonists of intellectualism, Alelander Halesand Albertus Magnus,
and finally the greatest pure intellect of all time, St. Thomas
Aquinas. St. Bernard, St. Francis of Assisi, the Victorines, maintained
that after all, as Henri Bergson was to say, seven hundred years later,
“the mind of man by its very nature is incapable of apprehending
reality,” and that therefore faith is better than reason. Lord Bacon
came to the same conclusion when he wrote “Let men please themselves as
they will in admiring and almost adoring the human kind, this is
certain; that, as an uneven mirrour distorts the rays of objects
according to its own figure and section, so the mind . . . cannot be
trusted.” And Hugh of St. Victor himself, had written, even in the days
of Abélard: “There was a certain wisdom that seemed such to them that
knew not the true wisdom. The world found it and began to be puffed up,
thinking itself great in this. Confiding in its wisdom it became
presumptuous and boasted it would attain the highest wisdom. And it
made itself a ladder of the face of creation. . . . Then those things
which were seen were known and there were other things which were not
known; and through those which were manifest they expected to reach
those that were hidden. And they stumbled and fell into the falsehoods
of their own imagining . . . So God made foolish the wisdom of this
world, and He pointed out another wisdom, which seemed foolishness and
was not. For it preached Christ crucified, in order that truth might be
sought in humility. But the world despised it, wishing to contemplate
the works of God, which He had made a source of wonder, and it did not
wish to venerate what He had set for imitation, neither did it look to
its own disease, seeking medicine in piety; but presuming on a false
health, it gave itself over with vain curiosity to the study of alien
things.”
These considerations troubled Abélard not at all. He was conscious of a
mind of singular acuteness and a tongue of parts, both of which would
do whatever he willed. Beneath all the tumultuous talk of Paris, when
he first arrived there, lay the great and unsolved problem of
Universals and this he promptly made his own, rushing in where others
feared to tread. William of Champeaux had rested on a Platonic basis,
Abélard assumed that of Aristotle, and the clash began. It is not a
lucid subject, but the best abstract may be found in Chapter XIV of
Henry Adams’ “Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres” while this and the two
succeeding chapters give the most luminous and vivacious account of the
principles at issue in this most vital of intellectual feuds.
“According to the latest authorities, the doctrine of universals which
convulsed the schools of the twelfth century has never received an
adequate answer. What is a species: what is a genus or a family or an
order? More or less convenient terms of classification, about which the
twelfth century cared very little, while it cared deeply about the
essence of classes! Science has become too complex to affirm the
existence of universal truths, but it strives for nothing else, and
disputes the problem, within its own limits, almost as earnestly as in
the twelfth century, when the whole field of human and superhuman
activity was shut between these barriers of substance, universals, and
particulars. Little has changed except the vocabulary and the method.
The schools knew that their society hung for life on the demonstration
that God, the ultimate universal, was a reality, out of which all other
universal truths or realities sprang. Truth was a real thing, outside
of human experience. The schools of Paris talked and thought of nothing
else. John of Salisbury, who attended Abélard’s lectures about 1136,
and became Bishop of Chartres in 1176, seems to have been more
surprised than we need be at the intensity of the emotion. ‘One never
gets away from this question,’ he said. ‘From whatever point a
discussion starts, it is always led back and attached to that. It is
the madness of Rufus about Naevia; “He thinks of nothing else; talks of
nothing else, and if Naevia did not exist, Rufus would be dumb.’”
. . . “In these scholastic tournaments the two champions started from
opposite points:—one from the ultimate substance, God,—the universal,
the ideal, the type;—the other from the individual, Socrates, the
concrete, the observed fact of experience, the object of sensual
perception. The first champion—William in this instance— assumed that
the universal was a real thing; and for that reason he was called a
realist. His opponent—Abélard—held that the universal was only
nominally real; and on that account he was called a nominalist. Truth,
virtue, humanity, exist as units and realities, said William. Truth,
replied Abélard, is only the sum of all possible facts that are true,
as humanity is the sum of all actual human beings. The ideal bed is a
form, made by God, said Plato. The ideal bed is a name, imagined by
ourselves, said Aristotle. ‘I start from the universe,’ said William.
‘I start from the atom,’ said Abélard; and, once having started, they
necessarily came into collision at some point between the two.”
In this “Story of My Misfortunes” Abélard gives his own account of the
triumphant manner in which he confounded his master, William, but as
Henry Adams says, “We should be more credulous than twelfth-century
monks, if we believed, on Abélard’s word in 1135, that in 1110 he had
driven out of the schools the most accomplished dialectician of the age
by an objection so familiar that no other dialectician was ever
silenced by it—whatever may have been the case with theologians--and so
obvious that it could not have troubled a scholar of fifteen. William
stated a selected doctrine as old as Plato; Abélard interposed an
objection as old as Aristotle. Probably Plato and Aristotle had
received the question and answer from philosophers ten thousand years
older than themselves. Certainly the whole of philosophy has always
been involved in this dispute.”
So began the battle of the schools with all its more than military
strategy and tactics, and in the end it was a drawn battle, in spite of
its marvels of intellectual heroism and dialectical sublety. Says Henry
Adams again:—
“In every age man has been apt to dream uneasily, rolling from side to
side, beating against imaginary bars, unless, tired out, he has sunk
into indifference or scepticism. Religious minds prefer scepticism. The
true saint is a profound sceptic; a total disbeliever in human reason,
who has more than once joined hands on this ground with some who were
at best sinners. Bernard was a total disbeliever in Scholasticism; so
was Voltaire. Bernard brought the society of his time to share his
scepticism, but could give the society no other intellectual amusement
to relieve its restlessness. His crusade failed; his ascetic enthusiasm
faded; God came no nearer. If there was in all France, between 1140 and
1200, a more typical Englishman of the future Church of England type
than John of Salisbury, he has left no trace; and John wrote a
description of his time which makes a picturesque contrast with the
picture painted by Abélard, his old master, of the century at its
beginning. John weighed Abélard and the schools against Bernard and the
cloister, and coolly concluded that the way to truth led rather through
Citeaux, which brought him to Chartres as Bishop in 1176, and to a mild
scepticism in faith. ‘I prefer to doubt’ he said, ‘rather than rashly
define what is hidden.’ The battle with the schools had then resulted
only in creating three kinds of sceptics:— the disbelievers in human
reason; the passive agnostics; and the sceptics proper, who would have
been atheists had they dared. The first class was represented by the
School of St. Victor; the second by John of Salisbury himself; the
third, by a class of schoolmen whom he called Cornificii, as though
they made a practice of inventing horns of dilemma on which to fix
their opponents; as, for example, they asked whether a pig which was
led to market was led by the man or the cord. One asks instantly: What
cord?—Whether Grace, for instance, or Free Will?
“Bishop John used the science he had learned in the school only to
reach the conclusion that, if philosophy were a science at all, its
best practical use was to teach charity—love. Even the early,
superficial debates of the schools, in 1100-50, had so exhausted the
subject that the most intelligent men saw how little was to be gained
by pursuing further those lines of thought. The twelfth century had
already reached the point where the seventeenth century stood when
Descartes renewed the attempt to give a solid, philosophical basis for
deism by his celebrated ‘Cogito, ergo sum.’ Although that ultimate fact
seemed new to Europe when Descartes revived it as the starting-point of
his demonstration, it was as old and familiar as St. Augustine to the
twelfth century, and as little conclusive as any other assumption of
the Ego or the Non-Ego. The schools argued, according to their tastes,
from unity to multiplicity, or from multiplicity to unity; but what
they wanted was to connect the two. They tried realism and found that
it led to pantheism. They tried nominalism and found that it ended in
materialism. They attempted a compromise in conceptualism which begged
the whole question. Then they lay down, exhausted. In the seventeenth
century—the same violent struggle broke out again, and wrung from
Pascal the famous outcry of despair in which the French language rose,
perhaps for the last time, to the grand style of the twelfth century.
To the twelfth century it belongs; to the century of faith and
simplicity; not to the mathematical certainties of Descartes and
Leibnitz and Newton, or to the mathematical abstractions of Spinoza.
Descartes had proclaimed his famous conceptual proof of God: ‘I am
conscious of myself, and must exist; I am conscious of God and He must
exist.’ Pascal wearily replied that it was not God he doubted, but
logic. He was tortured by the impossibility of rejecting man’s reason
by reason; unconsciously sceptical, he forced himself to disbelieve in
himself rather than admit a doubt of God. Man had tried to prove God,
and had failed: ‘The metaphysical proofs of God are so remote
(éloignees) from the reasoning of men, and so contradictory
(impliquées, far fetched) that they made little impression; and even if
they served to convince some people, it would only be during the
instant that they see the demonstration; an hour afterwards they fear
to have deceived themselves.’”
Abélard was always, as he has been called, a scholastic adventurer, a
philosophical and theological freelance, and it was after the Calamity
that he followed those courses that resulted finally in his silencing
and his obscure death. It is almost impossible for us of modern times
to understand the violence of partisanship aroused by his actions and
published words that centre apparently around the placing of the
hermitage he had made for himself under the patronage of the third
Person of the Trinity, the Paraclete, the Spirit of love and compassion
and consolation, and the consequent arguments by which he justified
himself. To us it seems that he was only trying to exalt the power of
the Holy Spirit, a pious action at the least but to the episcopal and
monastic conservators of the faith he seems to have been guilty of
trying to rationalize an unsolvable mystery, to find an intellectual
solution forbidden to man. In some obscure way the question seems to be
involved in that other of the function of the Blessed Virgin as the
fount of mercy and compassion, and at this time when the cult of the
Mother of God had reached its highest point of potency and poignancy
anything of the sort seemed intolerable.
For a time the affairs of Abélard prospered: Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis
was his defender, and he enjoyed the favor of the Pope and the King. He
was made an abbot and his influence spread in every direction. In 1137
the King died and conditions at Rome changed so that St. Bernard became
almost Pope and King in his own person. Within a year he proceeded
against Abélard; his “Theology” was condemned at a council of Sens,
this judgment was confirmed by the Pope, and the penalty of silence was
imposed on the author— probably the most severe punishment he could be
called upon to endure. As a matter of fact it was fatal to him. He
started forthwith for Rome but stopped at the Abbey of Cluny in the
company of its Abbot, Peter the Venerable, “the most amiable figure of
the twelfth century,” and no very devoted admirer of St. Bernard, to
whom, as a matter of fact, he had once written, “You perform all the
difficult religious duties; you fast, you watch, you suffer; but you
will not endure the easy ones--you do not love.” Here he found two
years of peace after his troubled life, dying in the full communion of
the Church on 21 April, 1142.
The problems of philosophy and theology that were so vital in the
Middle Ages interest us no more, even when they are less obscure than
those so rife in the twelfth century, but the problem of human love is
always near and so it is not perhaps surprising that the abiding
interest concerns itself with Abélard’s relationship with Héloïse. So
far as he is concerned it is not a very savoury matter. He deliberately
seduced a pupil, a beautiful girl entrusted to him by her uncle, a
simpleminded old canon of the Cathedral of Paris, under whose roof he
ensconced himself by false pretences and with the full intention of
gaining the niece for himself. Abélard seems to have exercised an
irresistible fascination for men and women alike, and his plot
succeeded to admiration. Stricken by a belated remorse, he finally
married Héloïse against her unselfish protests and partly to
legitimatize his unborn child, and shortly after he was surprised and
overpowered by emissaries of Canon Fulbert and subjected to irreparable
mutilation. He tells the story with perfect frankness and with hardly
more than formal expressions of compunction, and thereafter follows the
narrative of their separation, he to a monastery, she to a convent, and
of his care for her during her conventual life, or at least for that
part of it that had passed before the “History” was written. Through
the whole story it is Héloïse who shines brightly as a curiously
beautiful personality, unselfish, self sacrificing, and almost virginal
in her purity in spite of her fault. One has for her only sympathy and
affection whereas it is difficult to feel either for Abélard in spite
of his belated efforts at rectifying his own sin and his life-long
devotion to his solitary wife in her hidden cloister.
The whole story was instantly known, Abélard’s assailants were punished
in kind, and he himself shortly resumed his work of lecturing on
philosophy and, a little later, on theology. Apparently his reputation
did not suffer in the least, nor did hers; in fact her piety became
almost a by-word and his name as a great teacher increased by leaps and
bounds: neither his offence nor its punishment seemed to bring lasting
discredit. This fact, which seems strange to us, does not imply a lack
of moral sense in the community but rather the prevalence of standards
alien to our own. It is only since the advent of Puritanism that sexual
sins have been placed at the head of the whole category. During the
Middle Ages, as always under Christianity, the most deadly sins were
pride, covetousness, slander and anger. These implied inherent moral
depravity, but “illicit” love was love outside the law of man, and did
not of necessity and always involve moral guilt. Christ was Himself
very gentle and compassionate with the sins of the flesh but relentless
in the case of the greater sins of the spirit. Puritanism overturned
the balance of things, and by concentrating its condemnation on sexual
derelictions became blind to the greater sins of pride, avarice and
anger. We have inherited the prejudice without acquiring the
abstention, but the Middle Ages had a clearer sense of comparative
values and they could forgive, or even ignore, the sin of Abélard and
Héloïse when they could less easily excuse the sin of spiritual pride
or deliberate cruelty. Moreover, these same Middle Ages believed very
earnestly in the Divine forgiveness of sins for which there had been
real repentance and honest effort at amendment. Abélard and Héloïse had
been grievously punished, he himself had made every reparation that was
possible, his penitence was charitably assumed, and therefore it was
not for society to condemn what God would mercifully forgive.
The twelfth and thirteenth centuries were not an age of moral laxity;
ideals and standards and conduct were immeasurably higher than they had
been for five hundred years, higher than they were to be in the
centuries that followed the crest of Mediaevalism. It was however a
time of enormous vitality, of throbbing energy that was constantly
bursting its bounds, and as well a time of personal liberty and freedom
of action that would seem strange indeed to us in these days of endless
legal restraint and inhibitions mitigated by revolt. There were few
formal laws but there was Custom which was a sovereign law in itself,
and above all there was the moral law of the Church, establishing its
great fundamental principles but leaving details to the working out of
life itself. Behind the sin of Abélard lay his intolerable spiritual
pride, his selfishness and his egotism, qualities that society at large
did not recognize because of their devotion to his engaging personality
and their admiration for his dazzling intellectual gifts. Their idol
had sinned, he had been savagely punished, he had repented; that was
all there was about it and the question was at an end.
In reading the Historia Calamitatum there is one consideration that
suggests itself that is subject for serious thought. Written as it was
some years after the great tragedy of his life, it was a portrait that
somehow seems out of focus. We know that during his early years in
Paris Abélard was a bold and daring champion in the lists of dialectic;
brilliant, persuasive, masculine to a degree; yet this self-portrait is
of a man timid, suspicious, frightened of realities, shadows,
possibilities. He is in abject terror of councils, hidden enemies, even
of his life. The tone is querulous, even peevish at times, and always
the egotism and the pride persist, while he seems driven by the whip of
desire for intellectual adventure into places where he shrinks from
defending himself, or is unable to do so. The antithesis is complete
and one is driven to believe that the terrible mutilation to which he
had been subjected had broken down his personality and left him in all
things less than man. His narrative is full of accusations against all
manner of people, but it is not necessary to take all these literally,
for it is evident that his natural egotism, overlaid by the
circumstances of his calamity, produced an almost pathological
condition wherein suspicions became to him realities and terrors
established facts.
It is doubtful if Abélard should be ranked very high in the list of
Mediaeval philosophers. He was more a dialectician than a creative
force, and until the development of the episode with Héloïse he seems
to have cared primarily for the excitement of debate, with small regard
for the value or the subjects under discussion. As an intellectualist
he had much to do with the subsequent abandonment of Plato in favour of
Aristotle that was a mark of pure scholasticism, while the brilliancy
of his dialectical method became a model for future generations. After
the Calamity he turned from philosophy to theology and ethics and here
he reveals qualities of nobility not evident before. Particularly does
he insist upon the fact that it is the subjective intention that
determines the moral value of human actions even if it does not change
their essential character.
The story of this philosophical soldier of fortune is a romance from
beginning to end, a poignant human drama shot through with passion,
adventure, pathos and tragedy. In a sense it is an epitome of the
earlier Middle Ages and through it shines the bright light of an era of
fervid living, of exciting adventure, of phenomenal intellectual force
and of large and comprehensive liberty. As a single episode of passion
it is not particularly distinguished except for the appealing
personality of Héloïse; as a phase in the development of Christian
philosophy it is of only secondary value. United in one, the two
factors achieve a brilliant dramatic unity that has made the story of
Abélard and Héloïse immortal.
__________________________________________________________________
HISTORIA CALAMITATUM
__________________________________________________________________
FOREWORD
Often the hearts of men and women are stirred, as likewise they are
soothed in their sorrows, more by example than by words. And therefore,
because I too have known some consolation from speech had with one who
was a witness thereof, am I now minded to write of the sufferings which
have sprung out of my misfortunes, for the eyes of one who, though
absent, is of himself ever a consoler. This I do so that, in comparing
your sorrows with mine, you may discover that yours are in truth
nought, or at the most but of small account, and so shall you come to
bear them more easily.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER I
OF THE BIRTHPLACE OF PIERRE ABÉLARD AND OF HIS PARENTS
Know, then, that I am come from a certain town which was built on the
way into lesser Brittany, distant some eight miles, as I think,
eastward from the city of Nantes, and in its own tongue called Palets.
Such is the nature of that country, or, it may be, of them who dwell
there—for in truth they are quick in fancy—that my mind bent itself
easily to the study of letters. Yet more, I had a father who had won
some smattering of letters before he had girded on the soldier’s belt.
And so it came about that long afterwards his love thereof was so
strong that he saw to it that each son of his should be taught in
letters even earlier than in the management of arms. Thus indeed did it
come to pass. And because I was his first born, and for that reason the
more dear to him, he sought with double diligence to have me wisely
taught. For my part, the more I went forward in the study of letters,
and ever more easily, the greater became the ardour of my devotion to
them, until in truth I was so enthralled by my passion for learning
that, gladly leaving to my brothers the pomp of glory in arms, the
right of heritage and all the honours that should have been mine as the
eldest born, I fled utterly from the court of Mars that I might win
learning in the bosom of Minerva. And since I found the armory of
logical reasoning more to my liking than the other forms of philosophy,
I exchanged all other weapons for these, and to the prizes of victory
in war I preferred the battle of minds in disputation. Thenceforth,
journeying through many provinces, and debating as I went, going
whithersoever I heard that the study of my chosen art most flourished,
I became such an one as the Peripatetics.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER II
OF THE PERSECUTION HE HAD FROM HIS MASTER WILLIAM OF CHAMPEAUX—OF HIS
ADVENTURES AT MELUN, AT CORBEIL AND AT PARIS—OF HIS WITHDRAWAL FROM THE CITY
OF THE PARISIANS TO MELUN, AND HIS RETURN TO MONT STE. GENEVIÈVE—OF HIS
JOURNEY TO HIS OLD HOME
I came at length to Paris, where above all in those days the art of
dialectics was most flourishing, and there did I meet William of
Champeaux, my teacher, a man most distinguished in his science both by
his renown and by his true merit. With him I remained for some time, at
first indeed well liked of him; but later I brought him great grief,
because I undertook to refute certain of his opinions, not infrequently
attacking him in disputation, and now and then in these debates I was
adjudged victor. Now this, to those among my fellow students who were
ranked foremost, seemed all the more insufferable because of my youth
and the brief duration of my studies.
Out of this sprang the beginning of my misfortunes, which have followed
me even to the present day; the more widely my fame was spread abroad,
the more bitter was the envy that was kindled against me. It was given
out that I, presuming on my gifts far beyond the warranty of my youth,
was aspiring despite my tender, years to the leadership of a school;
nay, more, that I was making read the very place in which I would
undertake this task, the place being none other than the castle of
Melun, at that time a royal seat. My teacher himself had some
foreknowledge of this, and tried to remove my school as far as possible
from his own. Working in secret, he sought in every way he could before
I left his following to bring to nought the school I had planned and
the place I had chosen for it. Since, however, in that very place he
had many rivals, and some of them men of influence among the great ones
of the land, relying on their aid I won to the fulfillment of my wish;
the support of many was secured for me by reason of his own unconcealed
envy. From this small inception of my school, my fame in the art of
dialectics began to spread abroad, so that little by little the renown,
not alone of those who had been my fellow students, but of our very
teacher himself, grew dim and was like to die out altogether. Thus it
came about that, still more confident in myself, I moved my school as
soon as I well might to the castle of Corbeil, which is hard by the
city of Paris, for there I knew there would be given more frequent
chance for my assaults in our battle of disputation.
No long time thereafter I was smitten with a grievous illness, brought
upon me by my immoderate zeal for study. This illness forced me to turn
homeward to my native province, and thus for some years I was as if cut
off from France. And yet, for that very reason, I was sought out all
the more eagerly by those whose hearts were troubled by the lore of
dialectics. But after a few years had passed, and I was whole again
from my sickness, I learned that my teacher, that same William
Archdeacon of Paris, had changed his former garb and joined an order of
the regular clergy. This he had done, or so men said, in order that he
might be deemed more deeply religious, and so might be elevated to a
loftier rank in the prelacy, a thing which, in truth, very soon came to
pass, for he was made bishop of Châlons. Nevertheless, the garb he had
donned by reason of his conversion did nought to keep him away either
from the city of Paris or from his wonted study of philosophy; and in
the very monastery wherein he had shut himself up for the sake of
religion he straightway set to teaching again after the same fashion as
before.
To him did I return, for I was eager to learn more of rhetoric from his
lips; and in the course of our many arguments on various matters, I
compelled him by most potent reasoning first to alter his former
opinion on the subject of the universals, and finally to abandon it
altogether. Now, the basis of this old concept of his regarding the
reality of universal ideas was that the same quality formed the essence
alike of the abstract whole and of the individuals which were its
parts: in other words, that there could be no essential differences
among these individuals, all being alike save for such variety as might
grow out of the many accidents of existence. Thereafter, however, he
corrected this opinion, no longer maintaining that the same quality was
the essence of all things, but that, rather, it manifested itself in
them through diverse ways. This problem of universals is ever the most
vexed one among logicians, to such a degree, indeed, that even
Porphyry, writing in his “Isagoge” regarding universals, dared not
attempt a final pronouncement thereon, saying rather: “This is the
deepest of all problems of its kind.” Wherefore it followed that when
William had first revised and then finally abandoned altogether his
views on this one subject, his lecturing sank into such a state of
negligent reasoning that it could scarce be called lecturing on the
science of dialectics at all; it was as if all his science had been
bound up in this one question of the nature of universals.
Thus it came about that my teaching won such strength and authority
that even those who before had clung most vehemently to my former
master, and most bitterly attacked my doctrines, now flocked to my
school. The very man who had succeeded to my master’s chair in the
Paris school offered me his post, in order that he might put himself
under my tutelage along with all the rest, and this in the very place
where of old his master and mine had reigned. And when, in so short a
time, my master saw me directing the study of dialectics there, it is
not easy to find words to tell with what envy he was consumed or with
what pain he was tormented. He could not long, in truth, bear the
anguish of what he felt to be his wrongs, and shrewdly he attacked me
that he might drive me forth. And because there was nought in my
conduct whereby he could come at me openly, he tried to steal away the
school by launching the vilest calumnies against him who had yielded
his post to me, and by putting in his place a certain rival of mine. So
then I returned to Melun, and set up my school there as before; and the
more openly his envy pursued me, the greater was the authority it
conferred upon me. Even so held the poet: “Jealousy aims at the peaks;
the winds storm the loftiest summits.” (Ovid: “Remedy for Love,” I,
369.)
Not long thereafter, when William became aware of the fact that almost
all his students were holding grave doubts as to his religion, and were
whispering earnestly among themselves about his conversion, deeming
that he had by no means abandoned this world, he withdrew himself and
his brotherhood, together with his students, to a certain estate far
distant from the city. Forthwith I returned from Melun to Paris, hoping
for peace from him in the future. But since, as I have said, he had
caused my place to be occupied by a rival of mine, I pitched the camp,
as it were, of my school outside the city on Mont Ste. Geneviève. Thus
I was as one laying siege to him who had taken possession of my post.
No sooner had my master heard of this than he brazenly returned post
haste to the city, bringing back with him such students as he could,
and reinstating his brotherhood in their for mer monastery, much as if
he would free his soldiery, whom he had deserted, from my blockade. In
truth, though, if it was his purpose to bring them succour, he did
nought but hurt them. Before that time my rival had indeed had a
certain number of students, of one sort and another, chiefly by reason
of his lectures on Priscian, in which he was considered of great
authority. After our master had returned, however, he lost nearly all
of these followers, and thus was compelled to give up the direction of
the school. Not long thereafter, apparently despairing further of
worldly fame, he was converted to the monastic life.
Following the return of our master to the city, the combats in
disputation which my scholars waged both with him himself and with his
pupils, and the successes which fortune gave to us, and above all to
me, in these wars, you have long since learned of through your own
experience. The boast of Ajax, though I speak it more temperately, I
still am bold enough to make:
“... if fain you would learn now
How victory crowned the battle, by him was
I never vanquished.”
(Ovid, “Metamorphoses,” XIII, 89.)
But even were I to be silent, the fact proclaims itself, and its
outcome reveals the truth regarding it.
While these things were happening, it became needful for me again to
repair to my old home, by reason of my dear mother, Lucia, for after
the conversion of my father, Berengarius, to the monastic life, she so
ordered her affairs as to do likewise. When all this had been
completed, I returned to France, above all in order that I might study
theology, since now my oft-mentioned teacher, William, was active in
the episcopate of Châlons. In this held of learning Anselm of Laon, who
was his teacher therein, had for long years enjoyed the greatest
renown.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER III
OF HOW HE CAME TO LAON TO SEEK ANSELM AS TEACHER
Sought out, therefore, this same venerable man, whose fame, in truth,
was more the result of long-established custom than of the potency of
his own talent or intellect. If any one came to him impelled by doubt
on any subject, he went away more doubtful still. He was wonderful,
indeed, in the eyes of these who only listened to him, but those who
asked him questions perforce held him as nought. He had a miraculous
flock of words, but they were contemptible in meaning and quite void of
reason. When he kindled a fire, he filled his house with smoke and
illumined it not at all. He was a tree which seemed noble to those who
gazed upon its leaves from afar, but to those who came nearer and
examined it more closely was revealed its barrenness. When, therefore,
I had come to this tree that I might pluck the fruit thereof, I
discovered that it was indeed the fig tree which Our Lord cursed
(Matthew xxi, 19; Mark xi, 13), or that ancient oak to which Lucan
likened Pompey, saying:
“. . . he stands, the shade of a name once mighty,
Like to the towering oak in the midst of the fruitful field.”
(Lucan, “Pharsalia,” IV, 135.)
It was not long before I made this discovery, and stretched myself
lazily in the shade of that same tree. I went to his lectures less and
less often, a thing which some among his eminent followers took sorely
to heart, because they interpreted it as a mark of contempt for so
illustrious a teacher. Thenceforth they secretly sought to influence
him against me, and by their vile insinuations made me hated of him. It
chanced, moreover, that one day, after the exposition of certain texts,
we scholars were jesting among ourselves, and one of them, seeking to
draw me out, asked me what I thought of the lectures on the Books of
Scripture. I, who had as yet studied only the sciences, replied that
following such lectures seemed to me most useful in so far as the
salvation of the soul was concerned, but that it appeared quite
extraordinary to me that educated persons should not be able to
understand the sacred books simply by studying them themselves,
together with the glosses thereon, and without the aid of any teacher.
Most of those who were present mocked at me, and asked whether I myself
could do as I had said, or whether I would dare to undertake it. I
answered that if they wished, I was ready to try it. Forthwith they
cried out and jeered all the more. “Well and good,” said they; “we
agree to the test. Pick out and give us an exposition of some doubtful
passage in the Scriptures, so that we can put this boast of yours to
the proof.” And they all chose that most obscure prophecy of Ezekiel.
I accepted the challenge, and invited them to attend a lecture on the
very next day. Whereupon they undertook to give me good advice, saying
that I should by no means make undue haste in so important a matter,
but that I ought to devote a much loner space to working out my
exposition and offsetting my inexperience by diligent toil. To this I
replied indignantly that it was my wont to win success, not by routine,
but by ability. I added that I would abandon the test altogether unless
they would agree not to put off their attendance at my lecture. In
truth at this first lecture of mine only a few were present, for it
seemed quite absurd to all of them that I, hitherto so inexperienced in
discussing the Scriptures, should attempt the thing so hastily.
However, this lecture gave such satisfaction to all those who heard it
that they spread its praises abroad with notable enthusiasm, and thus
compelled me to continue my interpretation of the sacred text. When
word of this was bruited about, those who had stayed away from the
first lecture came eagerly, some to the second and more to the third,
and all of them were eager to write down the glosses which I had begun
on the first day, so as to have them from the very beginning.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER IV
OF THE PERSECUTION HE HAD FROM HIS TEACHER ANSELM
Now this venerable man of whom I have spoken was acutely smitten with
envy, and straightway incited, as I have already mentioned, by the
insinuations of sundry persons, began to persecute me for my lecturing
on the Scriptures no less bitterly than my former master, William, had
done for my work in philosophy. At that time there were in this old
man’s school two who were considered far to excel all the others:
Alberic of Rheims and Lotulphe the Lombard. The better opinion these
two held of themselves, the more they were incensed against me. Chiefly
at their suggestion, as it afterwards transpired, yonder venerable
coward had the impudence to forbid me to carry on any further in his
school the work of preparing glosses which I had thus begun. The
pretext he alleged was that if by chance in the course of this work I
should write anything containing blunders—as was likely enough in view
of my lack of training—the thing might be imputed to him. When this
came to the ears of his scholars, they were filled with indignation at
so undisguised a manifestation of spite, the like of which had never
been directed against any one before. The more obvious this rancour
became, the more it redounded to my honour, and his persecution did
nought save to make me more famous.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER V
OF HOW HE RETURNED TO PARIS AND FINISHED THE GLOSSES WHICH HE HAD BEGUN AT
LAON
And so, after a few days, I returned to Paris, and there for several
years I peacefully directed the school which formerly had been destined
for me, nay, even offered to me, but from which I had been driven out.
At the very outset of my work there, I set about completing the glosses
on Ezekiel which I had begun at Laon. These proved so satisfactory to
all who read them that they came to believe me no less adept in
lecturing on theology than I had proved myself to be in the held of
philosophy. Thus my school was notably increased in size by reason of
my lectures on subjects of both these kinds, and the amount of
financial profit as well as glory which it brought me cannot be
concealed from you, for the matter was widely talked of. But prosperity
always puffs up the foolish, and worldly comfort enervates the soul,
rendering it an easy prey to carnal temptations. Thus I, who by this
time had come to regard myself as the only philosopher remaining in the
whole world, and had ceased to fear any further disturbance of my
peace, began to loosen the rein on my desires, although hitherto I had
always lived in the utmost continence. And the greater progress I made
in my lecturing on philosophy or theology, the more I departed alike
from the practice of the philosophers and the spirit of the divines in
the uncleanness of my life. For it is well known, methinks, that
philosophers, and still more those who have devoted their lives to
arousing the love of sacred study, have been strong above all else in
the beauty of chastity.
Thus did it come to pass that while I was utterly absorbed in pride and
sensuality, divine grace, the cure for both diseases, was forced upon
me, even though I, forsooth, would fain have shunned it. First was I
punished for my sensuality, and then for my pride. For my sensuality I
lost those things whereby I practiced it; for my pride, engendered in
me by my knowledge of letters—and it is even as the Apostle said:
“Knowledge puffeth itself up” (I Cor. viii. 1)—I knew the humiliation
of seeing burned the very book in which I most gloried. And now it is
my desire that you should know the stories of these two happenings,
understanding them more truly from learning the very facts than from
hearing what is spoken of them, and in the order in which they came
about. Because I had ever held in abhorrence the foulness of
prostitutes, because I had diligently kept myself from all excesses and
from association with the women of noble birth who attended the school,
because I knew so little of the common talk of ordinary people,
perverse and subtly flattering chance gave birth to an occasion for
casting me lightly down from the heights of my own exaltation. Nay, in
such case not even divine goodness could redeem one who, having been so
proud, was brought to such shame, were it not for the blessed gift of
grace.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER VI
OF HOW, BROUGHT LOW BY HIS LOVE FOR HÉLOÏSE, HE WAS WOUNDED IN BODY AND SOUL
Now there dwelt in that same city of Paris a certain young girl named
Héloïse, the niece of a canon who was called Fulbert. Her uncle’s love
for her was equalled only by his desire that she should have the best
education which he could possibly procure for her. Of no mean beauty,
she stood out above all by reason of her abundant knowledge of letters.
Now this virtue is rare among women, and for that very reason it doubly
graced the maiden, and made her the most worthy of renown in the entire
kingdom. It was this young girl whom I, after carefully considering all
those qualities which are wont to attract lovers, determined to unite
with myself in the bonds of love, and indeed the thing seemed to me
very easy to be done. So distinguished was my name, and I possessed
such advantages of youth and comeliness, that no matter what woman I
might favour with my love, I dreaded rejection of none. Then, too, I
believed that I could win the maiden’s consent all the more easily by
reason of her knowledge of letters and her zeal therefor; so, even if
we were parted, we might yet be together in thought with the aid of
written messages. Perchance, too, we might be able to write more boldly
than we could speak, and thus at all times could we live in joyous
intimacy.
Thus, utterly aflame with my passion for this maiden, I sought to
discover means whereby I might have daily and familiar speech with her,
thereby the more easily to win her consent. For this purpose I
persuaded the girl’s uncle, with the aid of some of his friends, to
take me into his household—for he dwelt hard by my school—in return for
the payment of a small sum. My pretext for this was that the care of my
own household was a serious handicap to my studies, and likewise
burdened me with an expense far greater than I could afford. Now, he
was a man keen in avarice, and likewise he was most desirous for his
niece that her study of letters should ever go forward, so, for these
two reasons, I easily won his consent to the fulfillment of my wish,
for he was fairly agape for my money, and at the same time believed
that his niece would vastly benefit by my teaching. More even than
this, by his own earnest entreaties he fell in with my desires beyond
anything I had dared to hope, opening the way for my love; for he
entrusted her wholly to my guidance, begging me to give her instruction
whensoever I might be free from the duties of my school, no matter
whether by day or by night, and to punish her sternly if ever I should
find her negligent of her tasks. In all this the man’s simplicity was
nothing short of astounding to me; I should not have been more smitten
with wonder if he had entrusted a tender lamb to the care of a ravenous
wolf. When he had thus given her into my charge, not alone to be taught
but even to be disciplined, what had he done save to give free scope to
my desires, and to offer me every opportunity, even if I had not sought
it, to bend her to my will with threats and blows if I failed to do so
with caresses? There were, however, two things which particularly
served to allay any foul suspicion: his own love for his niece, and my
former reputation for continence.
Why should I say more: We were united first in the dwelling that
sheltered our love, and then in the hearts that burned with it. Under
the pretext of study we spent our hours in the happiness of love, and
learning held out to us the secret opportunities that our passion
craved. Our speech was more of love than of the book which lay open
before us; our kisses far outnumbered our reasoned words. Our hands
sought less the book than each other’s bosoms; love drew our eyes
together far more than the lesson drew them to the pages of our text.
In order that there might be no suspicion, there were, indeed,
sometimes blows, but love gave them, not anger; they were the marks,
not of wrath, but of a tenderness surpassing the most fragrant balm in
sweetness. What followed? No degree in love’s progress was left untried
by our passion, and if love itself could imagine any wonder as yet
unknown, we discovered it. And our inexperience of such delights made
us all the more ardent in our pursuit of them, so that our thirst for
one another was still unquenched.
In measure as this passionate rapture absorbed me more and more, I
devoted ever less time to philosophy and to the work of the school.
Indeed it became loathsome to me to go to the school or to linger
there; the labour, moreover, was very burdensome, since my nights were
vigils of love and my days of study. My lecturing became utterly
careless and lukewarm; I did nothing because of inspiration, but
everything merely as a matter of habit. I had become nothing more than
a reciter of my former discoveries, and though I still wrote poems,
they dealt with love, not with the secrets of philosophy. Of these
songs you yourself well know how some have become widely known and have
been sung in many lands, chiefly, methinks, by those who delighted in
the things of this world. As for the sorrow, the groans, the
lamentations of my students when they perceived the preoccupation, nay,
rather the chaos, of my mind, it is hard even to imagine them.
A thing so manifest could deceive only a few, no one, methinks, save
him whose shame it chiefly bespoke, the girl’s uncle, Fulbert. The
truth was often enough hinted to him, and by many persons, but he could
not believe it, partly, as I have said, by reason of his boundless love
for his niece, and partly because of the well-known continence of my
previous life. Indeed we do not easily suspect shame in those whom we
most cherish, nor can there be the blot of foul suspicion on devoted
love. Of this St. Jerome in his epistle to Sabinianus (Epist. 48) says:
“We are wont to be the last to know the evils of our own households,
and to be ignorant of the sins of our children and our wives, though
our neighbours sing them aloud.” But no matter how slow a matter may be
in disclosing itself, it is sure to come forth at last, nor is it easy
to hide from one what is known to all. So, after the lapse of several
months, did it happen with us. Oh, how great was the uncle’s grief when
he learned the truth, and how bitter was the sorrow of the lovers when
we were forced to part! With what shame was I overwhelmed, with what
contrition smitten because of the blow which had fallen on her I loved,
and what a tempest of misery burst over her by reason of my disgrace!
Each grieved most, not for himself, but for the other. Each sought to
allay, not his own sufferings, but those of the one he loved. The very
sundering of our bodies served but to link our souls closer together;
the plentitude of the love which was denied to us inflamed us more than
ever. Once the first wildness of shame had passed, it left us more
shameless than before, and as shame died within us the cause of it
seemed to us ever more desirable. And so it chanced with us as, in the
stories that the poets tell, it once happened with Mars and Venus when
they were caught together.
It was not long after this that Héloïse found that she was pregnant,
and of this she wrote to me in the utmost exultation, at the same time
asking me to consider what had best be done. Accordingly, on a night
when her uncle was absent, we carried out the plan we had determined
on, and I stole her secretly away from her uncle’s house, sending her
without delay to my own country. She remained there with my sister
until she gave birth to a son, whom she named Astrolabe. Meanwhile her
uncle, after his return, was almost mad with grief; only one who had
then seen him could rightly guess the burning agony of his sorrow and
the bitterness of his shame. What steps to take against me, or what
snares to set for me, he did not know. If he should kill me or do me
some bodily hurt, he feared greatly lest his dear-loved niece should be
made to suffer for it among my kinsfolk. He had no power to seize me
and imprison me somewhere against my will, though I make no doubt he
would have done so quickly enough had he been able or dared, for I had
taken measures to guard against any such attempt.
At length, however, in pity for his boundless grief, and bitterly
blaming myself for the suffering which my love had brought upon him
through the baseness of the deception I had practiced, I went to him to
entreat his forgiveness, promising to make any amends that he himself
might decree. I pointed out that what had happened could not seem
incredible to any one who had ever felt the power of love, or who
remembered how, from the very beginning of the human race, women had
cast down even the noblest men to utter ruin. And in order to make
amends even beyond his extremest hope, I offered to marry her whom I
had seduced, provided only the thing could be kept secret, so that I
might suffer no loss of reputation thereby. To this he gladly assented,
pledging his own faith and that of his kindred, and sealing with kisses
the pact which I had sought of him—and all this that he might the more
easily betray me.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER VII
OF THE ARGUMENTS OF HÉLOÏSE AGAINST WEDLOCK—OF HOW NONE THE LESS HE MADE HER
HIS WIFE
Forthwith I repaired to my own country, and brought back thence my
mistress, that I might make her my wife. She, however, most violently
disapproved of this, and for two chief reasons: the danger thereof, and
the disgrace which it would bring upon me. She swore that her uncle
would never be appeased by such satisfaction as this, as, indeed,
afterwards proved only too true. She asked how she could ever glory in
me if she should make me thus inglorious, and should shame herself
along with me. What penalties, she said, would the world rightly demand
of her if she should rob it of so shining a light! What curses would
follow such a loss to the Church, what tears among the philosophers
would result from such a marriage! How unfitting, how lamentable it
would be for me, whom nature had made for the whole world, to devote
myself to one woman solely, and to subject myself to such humiliation!
She vehemently rejected this marriage, which she felt would be in every
way ignominious and burdensome to me.
Besides dwelling thus on the disgrace to me, she reminded me of the
hardships of married life, to the avoidance of which the Apostle
exhorts us, saying: “Art thou loosed from a wife? seek not a wife. But
and if thou marry, thou hast not sinned; and if a virgin marry, she
hath not sinned. Nevertheless such shall have trouble in the flesh: but
I spare you” (I Cor. vii, 27). And again: “But I would have you to be
free from cares” (I Cor. vii, 32). But if I would heed neither the
counsel of the Apostle nor the exhortations of the saints regarding
this heavy yoke of matrimony, she bade me at least consider the advice
of the philosophers, and weigh carefully what had been written on this
subject either by them or concerning their lives. Even the saints
themselves have often and earnestly spoken on this subject for the
purpose of warning us. Thus St. Jerome, in his first book against
Jovinianus, makes Theophrastus set forth in great detail the
intolerable annoyances and the endless disturbances of married life,
demonstrating with the most convincing arguments that no wise man
should ever have a wife, and concluding his reasons for this
philosophic exhortation with these words: “Who among Christians would
not be overwhelmed by such arguments as these advanced by
Theophrastus?”
Again, in the same work, St. Jerome tells how Cicero, asked by Hircius
after his divorce of Terentia whether he would marry the sister of
Hircius, replied that he would do no such thing, saying that he could
not devote himself to a wife and to philosophy at the same time. Cicero
does not, indeed, precisely speak of “devoting himself,” but he does
add that he did not wish to undertake anything which might rival his
study of philosophy in its demands upon him.
Then, turning from the consideration of such hindrances to the study of
philosophy, Héloïse bade me observe what were the conditions of
honourable wedlock. What possible concord could there be between
scholars and domestics, between authors and cradles, between books or
tablets and distaffs, between the stylus or the pen and the spindle?
What man, intent on his religious or philosophical meditations, can
possibly endure the whining of children, the lullabies of the nurse
seeking to quiet them, or the noisy confusion of family life? Who can
endure the continual untidiness of children? The rich, you may reply,
can do this, because they have palaces or houses containing many rooms,
and because their wealth takes no thought of expense and protects them
from daily worries. But to this the answer is that the condition of
philosophers is by no means that of the wealthy, nor can those whose
minds are occupied with riches and worldly cares find time for
religious or philosophical study. For this reason the renowned
philosophers of old utterly despised the world, fleeing from its perils
rather than reluctantly giving them up, and denied themselves all its
delights in order that they might repose in the embraces of philosophy
alone. One of them, and the greatest of all, Seneca, in his advice to
Lucilius, says: “Philosophy is not a thing to be studied only in hours
of leisure; we must give up everything else to devote ourselves to it,
for no amount of time is really sufficient thereto” (Epist. 73).
It matters little, she pointed out, whether one abandons the study of
philosophy completely or merely interrupts it, for it can never remain
at the point where it was thus interrupted. All other occupations must
be resisted; it is vain to seek to adjust life to include them, and
they must simply be eliminated. This view is maintained, for example,
in the love of God by those among us who are truly called monastics,
and in the love of wisdom by all those who have stood out among men as
sincere philosophers. For in every race, gentiles or Jews or
Christians, there have always been a few who excelled their fellows in
faith or in the purity of their lives, and who were set apart from the
multitude by their continence or by their abstinence from worldly
pleasures.
Among the Jews of old there were the Nazarites, who consecrated
themselves to the Lord, some of them the sons of the prophet Elias and
others the followers of Eliseus, the monks of whom, on the authority of
St. Jerome (Epist. 4 and 13), we read in the Old Testament. More
recently there were the three philosophical sects which Josephus
defines in his Book of Antiquities (xviii, 2), calling them the
Pharisees, the Sadducees and the Essenes. In our times, furthermore,
there are the monks who imitate either the communal life of the
Apostles or the earlier and solitary life of John. Among the gentiles
there are, as has been said, the philosophers. Did they not apply the
name of wisdom or philosophy as much to the religion of life as to the
pursuit of learning, as we find from the origin of the word itself, and
likewise from the testimony of the saints?
There is a passage on this subject in the eighth book of St.
Augustine’s “City of God,” wherein he distinguishes between the various
schools of philosophy. “The Italian school,” he says, “had as its
founder Pythagoras of Samos, who, it is said, originated the very word
‘philosophy.’ Before his time those who were regarded as conspicuous
for the praiseworthiness of their lives were called wise men, but he,
on being asked of his profession, replied that he was a philosopher,
that is to say a student or a lover of wisdom, because it seemed to him
unduly boastful to call himself a wise man.” In this passage,
therefore, when the phrase “conspicuous for the praiseworthiness of
their lives” is used, it is evident that the wise, in other words the
philosophers, were so called less because of their erudition than by
reason of their virtuous lives. In what sobriety and continence these
men lived it is not for me to prove by illustration, lest I should seem
to instruct Minerva herself.
Now, she added, if laymen and gentiles, bound by no profession of
religion, lived after this fashion, what ought you, a cleric and a
canon, to do in order not to prefer base voluptuousness to your sacred
duties, to prevent this Charybdis from sucking you down headlong, and
to save yourself from being plunged shamelessly and irrevocably into
such filth as this? If you care nothing for your privileges as a
cleric, at least uphold your dignity as a philosopher. If you scorn the
reverence due to God, let regard for your reputation temper your
shamelessness. Remember that Socrates was chained to a wife, and by
what a filthy accident he himself paid for this blot on philosophy, in
order that others thereafter might be made more cautious by his
example. Jerome thus mentions this affair, writing about Socrates in
his first book against Jovinianus: “Once when he was withstanding a
storm of reproaches which Xantippe was hurling at him from an upper
story, he was suddenly drenched with foul slops; wiping his head, he
said only, ‘I knew there would be a shower after all that thunder.’”
Her final argument was that it would be dangerous for me to take her
back to Paris, and that it would be far sweeter for her to be called my
mistress than to be known as my wife; nay, too, that this would be more
honourable for me as well. In such case, she said, love alone would
hold me to her, and the strength of the marriage chain would not
constrain us. Even if we should by chance be parted from time to time,
the joy of our meetings would be all the sweeter by reason of its
rarity. But when she found that she could not convince me or dissuade
me from my folly by these and like arguments, and because she could not
bear to offend me, with grievous sighs and tears she made an end of her
resistance, saying: “Then there is no more left but this, that in our
doom the sorrow yet to come shall be no less than the love we two have
already known.” Nor in this, as now the whole world knows, did she lack
the spirit of prophecy.
So, after our little son was born, we left him in my sister’s care, and
secretly returned to Paris. A few days later, in the early morning,
having kept our nocturnal vigil of prayer unknown to all in a certain
church, we were united there in the benediction of wedlock, her uncle
and a few friends of his and mine being present. We departed forthwith
stealthily and by separate ways, nor thereafter did we see each other
save rarely and in private, thus striving our utmost to conceal what we
had done. But her uncle and those of his household, seeking solace for
their disgrace, began to divulge the story of our marriage, and thereby
to violate the pledge they had given me on this point. Héloïse, on the
contrary, denounced her own kin and swore that they were speaking the
most absolute lies. Her uncle, aroused to fury thereby, visited her
repeatedly with punishments. No sooner had I learned this than I sent
her to a convent of nuns at Argenteuil, not far from Paris, where she
herself had been brought up and educated as a young girl. I had them
make ready for her all the garments of a nun, suitable for the life of
a convent, excepting only the veil, and these I bade her put on.
When her uncle and his kinsmen heard of this, they were convinced that
now I had completely played them false and had rid myself forever of
Héloïse by forcing her to become a nun. Violently incensed, they laid a
plot against me, and one night, while I, all unsuspecting, was asleep
in a secret room in my lodgings, they broke in with the help of one of
my servants, whom they had bribed. There they had vengeance on me with
a most cruel and most shameful punishment, such as astounded the whole
world, for they cut off those parts of my body with which I had done
that which was the cause of their sorrow. This done, straightway they
fled, but two of them were captured, and suffered the loss of their
eyes and their genital organs. One of these two was the aforesaid
servant, who, even while he was still in my service, had been led by
his avarice to betray me.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER VIII
OF THE SUFFERING OF HIS BODY—OF HOW HE BECAME A MONK IN THE MONASTERY OF ST.
DENIS AND HÉLOÏSE A NUN AT ARGENTEUIL
When morning came the whole city was assembled before my dwelling. It
is difficult, nay, impossible, for words of mine to describe the
amazement which bewildered them, the lamentations they uttered, the
uproar with which they harassed me, or the grief with which they
increased my own suffering. Chiefly the clerics, and above all my
scholars, tortured me with their intolerable lamentations and outcries,
so that I suffered more intensely from their compassion than from the
pain of my wound. In truth I felt the disgrace more than the hurt to my
body, and was more afflicted with shame than with pain. My incessant
thought was of the renown in which I had so much delighted, now brought
low, nay, utterly blotted out, so swiftly by an evil chance. I saw,
too, how justly God had punished me in that very part of my body
whereby I had sinned. I perceived that there was indeed justice in my
betrayal by him whom I had myself already betrayed; and then I thought
how eagerly my rivals would seize upon this manifestation of justice,
how this disgrace would bring bitter and enduring grief to my kindred
and my friends, and how the tale of this amazing outrage would spread
to the very ends of the earth.
What path lay open to me thereafter? How could I ever again hold up my
head among men, when every finger should be pointed at me in scorn,
every tongue speak my blistering shame, and when I should be a
monstrous spectacle to all eyes? I was overwhelmed by the remembrance
that, according to the dread letter of the law, God holds eunuchs in
such abomination that men thus maimed are forbidden to enter a church,
even as the unclean and filthy; nay, even beasts in such plight were
not acceptable as sacrifices. Thus in Leviticus (xxii, 24) is it said:
“Ye shall not offer unto the Lord that which hath its stones bruised,
or crushed, or broken, or cut.” And in Deuteronomy (xxiii, 1), “He that
is wounded in the stones, or hath his privy member cut off, shall not
enter into the congregation of the Lord.”
I must confess that in my misery it was the overwhelming sense of my
disgrace rather than any ardour for conversion to the religious life
that drove me to seek the seclusion of the monastic cloister. Héloïse
had already, at my bidding, taken the veil and entered a convent. Thus
it was that we both put on the sacred garb, I in the abbey of St.
Denis, and she in the convent of Argenteuil, of which I have already
spoken. She, I remember well, when her fond friends sought vainly to
deter her from submitting her fresh youth to the heavy and almost
intolerable yoke of monastic life, sobbing and weeping replied in the
words of Cornelia:
“. . . O husband most noble,
Who ne’er shouldst have shared my couch! Has fortune such power
To smite so lofty a head? Why then was I wedded
Only to bring thee to woe? Receive now my sorrow,
The price I so gladly pay.”
(Lucan, “Pharsalia,” viii, 94.)
With these words on her lips did she go forthwith to the altar, and
lifted therefrom the veil, which had been blessed by the bishop, and
before them all she took the vows of the religious life. For my part,
scarcely had I recovered from my wound when clerics sought me in great
numbers, endlessly beseeching both my abbot and me myself that now,
since I was done with learning for the sake of gain or renown, I should
turn to it for the sole love of God. They bade me care diligently for
the talent which God had committed to my keeping (Matthew xxv, 15),
since surely He would demand it back from me with interest. It was
their plea that, inasmuch as of old I had laboured chiefly in behalf of
the rich, I should now devote myself to the teaching of the poor.
Therein above all should I perceive how it was the hand of God that had
touched me, when I should devote my life to the study of letters in
freedom from the snares of the flesh and withdrawn from the tumultuous
life of this world. Thus, in truth, should I become a philosopher less
of this world than of God.
The abbey, however, to which I had betaken myself was utterly worldly
and in its life quite scandalous. The abbot himself was as far below
his fellows in his way of living and in the foulness of his reputation
as he was above them in priestly rank. This intolerable state of things
I often and vehemently denounced, sometimes in private talk and
sometimes publicly, but the only result was that I made myself detested
of them all. They gladly laid hold of the daily eagerness of my
students to hear me as an excuse whereby they might be rid of me; and
finally, at the insistent urging of the students themselves, and with
the hearty consent of the abbot and the rest of the brotherhood, I
departed thence to a certain hut, there to teach in my wonted way. To
this place such a throng of students flocked that the neighbourhood
could not afford shelter for them, nor the earth sufficient sustenance.
Here, as befitted my profession, I devoted myself chiefly to lectures
on theology, but I did not wholly abandon the teaching of the secular
arts, to which I was more accustomed, and which was particularly
demanded of me. I used the latter, however, as a hook, luring my
students by the bait of learning to the study of the true philosophy,
even as the Ecclesiastical History tells of Origen, the greatest of all
Christian philosophers. Since apparently the Lord had gifted me with no
less persuasiveness in expounding the Scriptures than in lecturing on
secular subjects, the number of my students in these two courses began
to increase greatly, and the attendance at all the other schools was
correspondingly diminished. Thus I aroused the envy and hatred of the
other teachers. Those who sought to belittle me in every possible way
took advantage of my absence to bring two principal charges against me:
first, that it was contrary to the monastic profession to be concerned
with the study of secular books; and, second, that I had presumed to
teach theology without ever having been taught therein myself. This
they did in order that my teaching of every kind might be prohibited,
and to this end they continually stirred up bishops, archbishops,
abbots and whatever other dignitaries of the Church they could reach.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER IX
OF HIS BOOK ON THEOLOGY AND HIS PERSECUTION AT THE HANDS OF HIS FELLOW
STUDENTS—OF THE COUNCIL AGAINST HIM
It so happened that at the outset I devoted myself to analyzing the
basis of our faith through illustrations based on human understanding,
and I wrote for my students a certain tract on the unity and trinity of
God. This I did because they were always seeking for rational and
philosophical explanations, asking rather for reasons they could
understand than for mere words, saying that it was futile to utter
words which the intellect could not possibly follow, that nothing could
be believed unless it could first be understood, and that it was absurd
for any one to preach to others a thing which neither he himself nor
those whom he sought to teach could comprehend. Our Lord Himself
maintained this same thing when He said: “They are blind leaders of the
blind” (Matthew xv, 14).
Now, a great many people saw and read this tract, and it became
exceedingly popular, its clearness appealing particularly to all who
sought information on this subject. And since the questions involved
are generally considered the most difficult of all, their complexity is
taken as the measure of the subtlety of him who succeeds in answering
them. As a result, my rivals became furiously angry, and summoned a
council to take action against me, the chief instigators therein being
my two intriguing enemies of former days, Alberic and Lotulphe. These
two, now that both William and Anselm, our erstwhile teachers, were
dead, were greedy to reign in their stead, and, so to speak, to succeed
them as heirs. While they were directing the school at Rheims, they
managed by repeated hints to stir up their archbishop, Rodolphe,
against me, for the purpose of holding a meeting, or rather an
ecclesiastical council, at Soissons, provided they could secure the
approval of Conon, Bishop of Praeneste, at that time papal legate in
France. Their plan was to summon me to be present at this council,
bringing with me the famous book I had written regarding the Trinity.
In all this, indeed, they were successful, and the thing happened
according to their wishes.
Before I reached Soissons, however, these two rivals of mine so foully
slandered me with both the clergy and the public that on the day of my
arrival the people came near to stoning me and the few students of mine
who had accompanied me thither. The cause of their anger was that they
had been led to believe that I had preached and written to prove the
existence of three gods. No sooner had I reached the city, therefore,
than I went forthwith to the legate; to him I submitted my book for
examination and judgment, declaring that if I had written anything
repugnant to the Catholic faith, I was quite ready to correct it or
otherwise to make satisfactory amends. The legate directed me to refer
my book to the archbishop and to those same two rivals of mine, to the
end that my accusers might also be my judges. So in my case was
fulfilled the saying: “Even our enemies are our judges” (Deut. xxxii,
31).
These three, then, took my book and pawed it over and examined it
minutely, but could find nothing therein which they dared to use as the
basis for a public accusation against me. Accordingly they put off the
condemnation of the book until the close of the council, despite their
eagerness to bring it about. For my part, everyday before the council
convened I publicly discussed the Catholic faith in the light of what I
had written, and all who heard me were enthusiastic in their approval
alike of the frankness and the logic of my words. When the public and
the clergy had thus learned something of the real character of my
teaching, they began to say to one another: “Behold, now he speaks
openly, and no one brings any charge against him. And this council,
summoned, as we have heard, chiefly to take action upon his case, is
drawing toward its end. Did the judges realize that the error might be
theirs rather than his?”
As a result of all this, my rivals grew more angry day by day. On one
occasion Alberic, accompanied by some of his students, came to me for
the purpose of intimidating me, and, after a few bland words, said that
he was amazed at something he had found in my book, to the effect that,
although God had begotten God, I denied that God had begotten Himself,
since there was only one God. I answered unhesitatingly: “I can give
you an explanation of this if you wish it.” “Nay,” he replied, “I care
nothing for human explanation or reasoning in such matters, but only
for the words of authority.” “Very well.” I said; “turn the pages of my
book and you will find the authority likewise.” The book was at hand,
for he had brought it with him. I turned to the passage I had in mind,
which he had either not discovered or else passed over as containing
nothing injurious to me. And it was God’s will that I quickly found
what I sought. This was the following sentence, under the heading
“Augustine, On the Trinity, Book I”: “Whosoever believes that it is
within the power of God to beget Himself is sorely in error; this power
is not in God, neither is it in any created thing, spiritual or
corporeal. For there is nothing that can give birth to itself.”
When those of his followers who were present heard this, they were
amazed and much embarrassed. He himself, in order to keep his
countenance, said: “Certainly, I understand all that.” Then I added:
“What I have to say further on this subject is by no means new, but
apparently it has nothing to do with the case at issue, since you have
asked for the word of authority only, and not for explanations. If,
however, you care to consider logical explanations, I am prepared to
demonstrate that, according to Augustine’s statement, you have yourself
fallen into a heresy in believing that a father can possibly be his own
son.” When Alberic heard this he was almost beside himself with rage,
and straightway resorted to threats, asserting that neither my
explanations nor my citations of authority would avail me aught in this
case. With this he left me.
On the last day of the council, before the session convened, the legate
and the archbishop deliberated with my rivals and sundry others as to
what should be done about me and my book, this being the chief reason
for their having come together. And since they had discovered nothing
either in my speech or in what I had hitherto written which would give
them a case against me, they were all reduced to silence, or at the
most to maligning me in whispers. Then Geoffroi, Bishop of Chartres,
who excelled the other bishops alike in the sincerity of his religion
and in the importance of his see, spoke thus:
“You know, my lords, all who are gathered here, the doctrine of this
man, what it is, and his ability, which has brought him many followers
in every field to which he has devoted himself. You know how greatly he
has lessened the renown of other teachers, both his masters and our
own, and how he has spread as it were the offshoots of his vine from
sea to sea. Now, if you impose a lightly considered judgment on him, as
I cannot believe you will, you well know that even if mayhap you are in
the right there are many who will be angered thereby, and that he will
have no lack of defenders. Remember above all that we have found
nothing in this book of his that lies before us whereon any open
accusation can be based. Indeed it is true, as Jerome says: ‘Fortitude
openly displayed always creates rivals, and the lightning strikes the
highest peaks.’ Have a care, then, lest by violent action you only
increase his fame, and lest we do more hurt to ourselves through envy
than to him through justice. A false report, as that same wise man
reminds us, is easily crushed, and a man’s later life gives testimony
as to his earlier deeds. If, then, you are disposed to take canonical
action against him, his doctrine or his writings must be brought
forward as evidence, and he must have free opportunity to answer his
questioners. In that case, if he is found guilty or if he confesses his
error, his lips can be wholly sealed. Consider the words of the blessed
Nicodemus, who, desiring to free Our Lord Himself, said: ‘Doth our law
judge any man before it hear him and know what he doeth? ‘” (John vii,
51).
When my rivals heard this they cried out in protest, saying: “This is
wise counsel, forsooth, that we should strive against the wordiness of
this man, whose arguments, or rather, sophistries, the whole world
cannot resist!” And yet, methinks, it was far more difficult to strive
against Christ Himself, for Whom, nevertheless, Nicodemus demanded a
hearing in accordance with the dictates of the law. When the bishop
could not win their assent to his proposals, he tried in another way to
curb their hatred, saying that for the discussion of such an important
case the few who were present were not enough, and that this matter
required a more thorough examination. His further suggestion was that
my abbot, who was there present, should take me back with him to our
abbey, in other words to the monastery of St. Denis, and that there a
large convocation of learned men should determine, on the basis of a
careful investigation, what ought to be done. To this last proposal the
legate consented, as did all the others.
Then the legate arose to celebrate mass before entering the council,
and through the bishop sent me the permission which had been determined
on, authorizing me to return to my monastery and there await such
action as might be finally taken. But my rivals, perceiving that they
would accomplish nothing if the trial were to be held outside of their
own diocese, and in a place where they could have little influence on
the verdict, and in truth having small wish that justice should be
done, persuaded the archbishop that it would be a grave insult to him
to transfer this case to another court, and that it would be dangerous
for him if by chance I should thus be acquitted. They likewise went to
the legate, and succeeded in so changing his opinion that finally they
induced him to frame a new sentence, whereby he agreed to condemn my
book without any further inquiry, to burn it forthwith in the sight of
all, and to confine me for a year in another monastery. The argument
they used was that it sufficed for the condemnation of my book that I
had presumed to read it in public without the approval either of the
Roman pontiff or of the Church, and that, furthermore, I had given it
to many to be transcribed. Methinks it would be a notable blessing to
the Christian faith if there were more who displayed a like
presumption. The legate, however, being less skilled in law than he
should have been, relied chiefly on the advice of the archbishop, and
he, in turn, on that of my rivals. When the Bishop of Chartres got wind
of this, he reported the whole conspiracy to me, and strongly urged me
to endure meekly the manifest violence of their enmity. He bade me not
to doubt that this violence would in the end react upon them and prove
a blessing to me, and counseled me to have no fear of the confinement
in a monastery, knowing that within a few days the legate himself, who
was now acting under compulsion, would after his departure set me free.
And thus he consoled me as best he might, mingling his tears with mine.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER X
OF THE BURNING OF HIS BOOK—OF THE PERSECUTION HE HAD AT THE HANDS OF HIS
ABBOT AND THE BRETHREN
Straightway upon my summons I went to the council, and there, without
further examination or debate, did they compel me with my own hand to
cast that memorable book of mine into the flames. Although my enemies
appeared to have nothing to say while the book was burning, one of them
muttered something about having seen it written therein that God the
Father was alone omnipotent. This reached the ears of the legate, who
replied in astonishment that he could not believe that even a child
would make so absurd a blunder. “Our common faith,” he said, “holds and
sets forth that the Three are alike omnipotent.” A certain Tirric, a
schoolmaster, hearing this, sarcastically added the Athanasian phrase,
“And yet there are not three omnipotent Persons, but only One.”
This man’s bishop forthwith began to censure him, bidding him desist
from such treasonable talk, but he boldly stood his ground, and said,
as if quoting the words of Daniel: “‘Are ye such fools, ye sons of
Israel, that without examination or knowledge of the truth ye have
condemned a daughter of Israel? Return again to the place of judgment,’
(Daniel xiii, 48—The History of Susanna) and there give judgment on the
judge himself. You have set up this judge, forsooth, for the
instruction of faith and the correction of error, and yet, when he
ought to give judgment, he condemns himself out of his own mouth. Set
free today, with the help of God’s mercy, one who is manifestly
innocent, even as Susanna was freed of old from her false accusers.”
Thereupon the archbishop arose and confirmed the legate’s statement,
but changed the wording thereof, as indeed was most fitting. “It is
God’s truth,” he said, “that the Father is omnipotent, the Son is
omnipotent, the Holy Spirit is omnipotent. And whosoever dissents from
this is openly in error, and must not be listened to. Nevertheless, if
it be your pleasure, it would be well that this our brother should
publicly state before us all the faith that is in him, to the end that,
according to its deserts, it may either be approved or else condemned
and corrected.”
When, however, I fain would have arisen to profess and set forth my
faith, in order that I might express in my own words that which was in
my heart, my enemies declared that it was not needful for me to do more
than recite the Athanasian Symbol, a thing which any boy might do as
well as I. And lest I should allege ignorance, pretending that I did
not know the words by heart, they had a copy of it set before me to
read. And read it I did as best I could for my groans and sighs and
tears. Thereupon, as if I had been a convicted criminal, I was handed
over to the Abbot of St. Medard, who was there present, and led to his
monastery as to a prison. And with this the council was immediately
dissolved.
The abbot and the monks of the aforesaid monastery, thinking that I
would remain long with them, received me with great exultation, and
diligently sought to console me, but all in vain. O God, who dost judge
justice itself, in what venom of the spirit, in what bitterness of
mind, did I blame even Thee for my shame, accusing Thee in my madness!
Full often did I repeat the lament of St. Anthony: “Kindly Jesus, where
wert Thou?” The sorrow that tortured me, the shame that overwhelmed me,
the desperation that wracked my mind, all these I could then feel, but
even now I can find no words to express them. Comparing these new
sufferings of my soul with those I had formerly endured in my body, it
seemed that I was in very truth the most miserable among men. Indeed
that earlier betrayal had become a little thing in comparison with this
later evil, and I lamented the hurt to my fair name far more than the
one to my body. The latter, indeed, I had brought upon myself through
my own wrongdoing, but this other violence had come upon me solely by
reason of the honesty of my purpose and my love of our faith, which had
compelled me to write that which I believed.
The very cruelty and heartlessness of my punishment, however, made
every one who heard the story vehement in censuring it, so that those
who had a hand therein were soon eager to disclaim all responsibility,
shouldering the blame on others. Nay, matters came to such a pass that
even my rivals denied that they had had anything to do with the matter,
and as for the legate, he publicly denounced the malice with which the
French had acted. Swayed by repentance for his injustice, and feeling
that he had yielded enough to satisfy their rancour, he shortly freed
me from the monastery whither I had been taken, and sent me back to my
own. Here, however, I found almost as many enemies as I had in the
former days of which I have already spoken, for the vileness and
shamelessness of their way of living made them realize that they would
again have to endure my censure.
After a few months had passed, chance gave them an opportunity by which
they sought to destroy me. It happened that one day, in the course of
my reading, I came upon a certain passage of Bede, in his commentary on
the Acts of the Apostles, wherein he asserts that Dionysius the
Areopagite was the bishop, not of Athens, but of Corinth. Now, this was
directly counter to the belief of the monks, who were wont to boast
that their Dionysius, or Denis, was not only the Areopagite but was
likewise proved by his acts to have been the Bishop of Athens. Having
thus found this testimony of Bede’s in contradiction of our own
tradition, I showed it somewhat jestingly to sundry of the monks who
chanced to be near. Wrathfully they declared that Bede was no better
than a liar, and that they had a far more trustworthy authority in the
person of Hilduin, a former abbot of theirs, who had travelled for a
long time throughout Greece for the purpose of investigating this very
question. He, they insisted, had by his writings removed all possible
doubt on the subject, and had securely established the truth of the
traditional belief.
One of the monks went so far as to ask me brazenly which of the two,
Bede or Hilduin, I considered the better authority on this point. I
replied that the authority of Bede, whose writings are held in high
esteem by the whole Latin Church, appeared to me the better. Thereupon
in a great rage they began to cry out that at last I had openly proved
the hatred I had always felt for our monastery, and that I was seeking
to disgrace it in the eyes of the whole kingdom, robbing it of the
honour in which it had particularly gloried, by thus denying that the
Areopagite was their patron saint. To this I answered that I had never
denied the fact, and that I did not much care whether their patron was
the Areopagite or some one else, provided only he had received his
crown from God. Thereupon they ran to the abbot and told him of the
misdemeanour with which they charged me.
The abbot listened to their story with delight, rejoicing at having
found a chance to crush me, for the greater vileness of his life made
him fear me more even than the rest did. Accordingly he summoned his
council, and when the brethren had assembled he violently threatened
me, declaring that he would straightway send me to the king, by him to
be punished for having thus sullied his crown and the glory of his
royalty. And until he should hand me over to the king, he ordered that
I should be closely guarded. In vain did I offer to submit to the
customary discipline if I had in any way been guilty. Then, horrified
at their wickedness, which seemed to crown the ill fortune I had so
long endured, and in utter despair at the apparent conspiracy of the
whole world against me, I fled secretly from the monastery by night,
helped thereto by some of the monks who took pity on me, and likewise
aided by some of my scholars.
I made my way to a region where I had formerly dwelt, hard by the lands
of Count Theobald (of Champagne). He himself had some slight
acquaintance with me, and had compassion on me by reason of my
persecutions, of which the story had reached him. I found a home there
within the walls of Provins, in a priory of the monks of Troyes, the
prior of which had in former days known me well and shown me much love.
In his joy at my coming he cared for me with all diligence. It chanced,
however, that one day my abbot came to Provins to see the count on
certain matters of business. As soon as I had learned of this, I went
to the count, the prior accompanying me, and besought him to intercede
in my behalf with the abbot. I asked no more than that the abbot should
absolve me of the charge against me, and give me permission to live the
monastic life wheresoever I could find a suitable place. The abbot,
however, and those who were with him took the matter under advisement,
saying that they would give the count an answer the day before they
departed. It appeared from their words that they thought I wished to go
to some other abbey, a thing which they regarded as an immense disgrace
to their own. They had, indeed, taken particular pride in the fact
that, upon my conversion, I had come to them, as if scorning all other
abbeys, and accordingly they considered that it would bring great shame
upon them if I should now desert their abbey and seek another. For this
reason they refused to listen either to my own plea or to that of the
count. Furthermore, they threatened me with excommunication unless I
should instantly return; likewise they forbade the prior with whom I
had taken refuge to keep me longer, under pain of sharing my
excommunication. When we heard this both the prior and I were stricken
with fear. The abbot went away still obdurate, but a few days
thereafter he died.
As soon as his successor had been named, I went to him, accompanied by
the Bishop of Meaux, to try if I might win from him the permission I
had vainly sought of his predecessor. At first he would not give his
assent, but finally, through the intervention of certain friends of
mine, I secured the right to appeal to the king and his council, and in
this way I at last obtained what I sought. The royal seneschal,
Stephen, having summoned the abbot and his subordinates that they might
state their case, asked them why they wanted to keep me against my
will. He pointed out that this might easily bring them into evil
repute, and certainly could do them no good, seeing that their way of
living was utterly incompatible with mine. I knew it to be the opinion
of the royal council that the irregularities in the conduct of this
abbey would tend to bring it more and more under the control of the
king, making it increasingly useful and likewise profitable to him, and
for this reason I had good hope of easily winning the support of the
king and those about him.
Thus, indeed, did it come to pass. But in order that the monastery
might not be shorn of any of the glory which it had enjoyed by reason
of my sojourn there, they granted me permission to betake myself to any
solitary place I might choose, provided only I did not put myself under
the rule of any other abbey. This was agreed upon and confirmed on both
sides in the presence of the king and his councellors. Forthwith I
sought out a lonely spot known to me of old in the region of Troyes,
and there, on a bit of land which had been given to me, and with the
approval of the bishop of the district, I built with reeds and stalks
my first oratory in the name of the Holy Trinity. And there concealed,
with but one comrade, a certain cleric, I was able to sing over and
over again to the Lord: “Lo, then would I wander far off, and remain in
the wilderness” (Ps. iv, 7).
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER XI
OF HIS TEACHING IN THE WILDERNESS
No sooner had scholars learned of my retreat than they began to flock
thither from all sides, leaving their towns and castles to dwell in the
wilderness. In place of their spacious houses they built themselves
huts; instead of dainty fare they lived on the herbs of the field and
coarse bread; their soft beds they exchanged for heaps of straw and
rushes, and their tables were piles of turf. In very truth you may well
believe that they were like those philosophers of old of whom Jerome
tells us in his second book against Jovinianus.
“Through the senses,” says Jerome, “as through so many windows, do
vices win entrance to the soul. The metropolis and citadel of the mind
cannot be taken unless the army of the foe has first rushed in through
the gates. If any one delights in the games of the circus, in the
contests of athletes, in the versatility of actors, in the beauty of
women, in the glitter of gems and raiment, or in aught else like to
these, then the freedom of his soul is made captive through the windows
of his eyes, and thus is fulfilled the prophecy: ‘For death is come up
into our windows’ (Jer. ix, 21). And then, when the wedges of doubt
have, as it were, been driven into the citadels of our minds through
these gateways, where will be its liberty? where its fortitude? where
its thought of God? Most of all does the sense of touch paint for
itself the pictures of past raptures, compelling the soul to dwell
fondly upon remembered iniquities, and so to practice in imagination
those things which reality denies to it.
“Heeding such counsel, therefore, many among the philosophers forsook
the thronging ways of the cities and the pleasant gardens of the
countryside, with their well-watered fields, their shady trees, the
song of birds, the mirror of the fountain, the murmur of the stream,
the many charms for eye and ear, fearing lest their souls should grow
soft amid luxury and abundance of riches, and lest their virtue should
thereby be defiled. For it is perilous to turn your eyes often to those
things whereby you may some day be made captive, or to attempt the
possession of that which it would go hard with you to do without. Thus
the Pythagoreans shunned all companionship of this kind, and were wont
to dwell in solitary and desert places. Nay, Plato himself, although he
was a rich man, let Diogenes trample on his couch with muddy feet, and
in order that he might devote himself to philosophy established his
academy in a place remote from the city, and not only uninhabited but
unhealthy as well. This he did in order that the onslaughts of lust
might be broken by the fear and constant presence of disease, and that
his followers might find no pleasure save in the things they learned.”
Such a life, likewise, the sons of the prophets who were the followers
of Eliseus are reported to have led. Of these Jerome also tells us,
writing thus to the monk Rusticus as if describing the monks of those
ancient days: “The sons of the prophets, the monks of whom we read in
the Old Testament, built for themselves huts by the waters of the
Jordan, and forsaking the throngs and the cities, lived on pottage and
the herbs of the field” (Epist. iv).
Even so did my followers build their huts above the waters of the
Arduzon, so that they seemed hermits rather than scholars. And as their
number grew ever greater, the hardships which they gladly endured for
the sake of my teaching seemed to my rivals to reflect new glory on me,
and to cast new shame on themselves. Nor was it strange that they, who
had done their utmost to hurt me, should grieve to see how all things
worked together for my good, even though I was now, in the words of
Jerome, afar from cities and the market place, from controversies and
the crowded ways of men. And so, as Quintilian says, did envy seek me
out even in my hiding place. Secretly my rivals complained and lamented
one to another, saying: “Behold now, the whole world runs after him,
and our persecution of him has done nought save to increase his glory.
We strove to extinguish his fame, and we have but given it new
brightness. Lo, in the cities scholars have at hand everything they may
need, and yet, spurning the pleasures of the town, they seek out the
barrenness of the desert, and of their own free will they accept
wretchedness.”
The thing which at that time chiefly led me to undertake the direction
of a school was my intolerable poverty, for I had not strength enough
to dig, and shame kept me from begging. And so, resorting once more to
the art with which I was so familiar, I was compelled to substitute the
service of the tongue for the labour of my hands. The students
willingly provided me with whatsoever I needed in the way of food and
clothing, and likewise took charge of the cultivation of the fields and
paid for the erection of buildings, in order that material cares might
not keep me from my studies. Since my oratory was no longer large
enough to hold even a small part of their number, they found it
necessary to increase its size, and in so doing they greatly improved
it, building it of stone and wood. Although this oratory had been
founded in honour of the Holy Trinity, and afterwards dedicated
thereto, I now named it the Paraclete, mindful of how I had come there
a fugitive and in despair, and had breathed into my soul something of
the miracle of divine consolation.
Many of those who heard of this were greatly astonished, and some
violently assailed my action, declaring that it was not permissible to
dedicate a church exclusively to the Holy Spirit rather than to God the
Father. They held, according to an ancient tradition, that it must be
dedicated either to the Son alone or else to the entire Trinity. The
error which led them into this false accusation resulted from their
failure to perceive the identity of the Paraclete with the Spirit
Paraclete. Even as the whole Trinity, or any Person in the Trinity, may
rightly be called God or Helper, so likewise may It be termed the
Paraclete, that is to say the Consoler. These are the words of the
Apostle: “Blessed be God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the
Father of mercies, and the God of all comfort; who comforteth us in all
our tribulation” (2 Cor. i, 3). And likewise the word of truth says:
“And he shall give you another comforter” (Greek “another Paraclete,”
John xiv, 16).
Nay, since every church is consecrated equally in the name of the
Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, without any difference in their
possession thereof, why should not the house of God be dedicated to the
Father or to the Holy Spirit, even as it is to the Son? Who would
presume to erase from above the door the name of him who is the master
of the house? And since the Son offered Himself as a sacrifice to the
Father, and accordingly in the ceremonies of the mass the prayers are
offered particularly to the Father, and the immolation of the Host is
made to Him, why should the altar not be held to be chiefly His to whom
above all the supplication and sacrifice are made? Is it not called
more rightly the altar of Him who receives than of Him who makes the
sacrifice? Who would admit that an altar is that of the Holy Cross, or
of the Sepulchre, or of St. Michael, or John, or Peter, or of any other
saint, unless either he himself was sacrificed there or else special
sacrifices and prayers are made there to him? Methinks the altars and
temples of certain ones among these saints are not held to be
idolatrous even though they are used for special sacrifices and prayers
to their patrons.
Some, however, may perchance argue that churches are not built or
altars dedicated to the Father because there is no feast which is
solemnized especially for Him. But while this reasoning holds good as
regards the Trinity itself, it does not apply in the case of the Holy
Spirit. For this Spirit, from the day of Its advent, has had Its
special feast of the Pentecost, even as the Son has had since His
coming upon earth His feast of the Nativity. Even as the Son was sent
into this world, so did the Holy Spirit descend upon the disciples, and
thus does It claim Its special religious rites. Nay, it seems more
fitting to dedicate a temple to It than to either of the other Persons
of the Trinity, if we but carefully study the apostolic authority, and
consider the workings of this Spirit Itself. To none of the three
Persons did the apostle dedicate a special temple save to the Holy
Spirit alone. He does not speak of a temple of the Father, or a temple
of the Son, as he does of a temple of the Holy Spirit, writing thus in
his first epistle to the Corinthians: “But he that is joined unto the
Lord is one spirit.” (I Cor. vi, 17). And again: “What? know ye not
that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which
ye have of God, and ye are not your own?” (ib. 19).
Who is there who does not know that the sacraments of God’s blessings
pertaining to the Church are particularly ascribed to the operation of
divine grace, by which is meant the Holy Spirit? Forsooth we are born
again of water and of the Holy Spirit in baptism, and thus from the
very beginning is the body made, as it were, a special temple of God.
In the successive sacraments, moreover, the seven-fold grace of the
Spirit is added, whereby this same temple of God is made beautiful and
is consecrated. What wonder is it, then, if to that Person to Whom the
apostle assigned a spiritual temple we should dedicate a material one?
Or to what Person can a church be more rightly said to belong than to
Him to Whom all the blessings which the church administers are
particularly ascribed? It was not, however, with the thought of
dedicating my oratory to one Person that I first called it the
Paraclete, but for the reason I have already told, that in this spot I
found consolation. ‘None the less, even if I had done it for the reason
attributed to me, the departure from the usual custom would have been
in no way illogical.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER XII
OF THE PERSECUTION DIRECTED AGAINST HIM BY SUNDRY NEW ENEMIES OR, AS IT WERE,
APOSTLES
And so I dwelt in this place, my body indeed hidden away, but my fame
spreading throughout the whole world, till its echo reverberated
mightily-echo, that fancy of the poet’s, which has so great a voice,
and nought beside. My former rivals, seeing that they themselves were
now powerless to do me hurt, stirred up against me certain new apostles
in whom the world put great faith. One of these (Norbert of Prémontré)
took pride in his position as canon of a regular order; the other
(Bernard of Clairvaux) made it his boast that he had revived the true
monastic life. These two ran hither and yon preaching and shamelessly
slandering me in every way they could, so that in time they succeeded
in drawing down on my head the scorn of many among those having
authority, among both the clergy and the laity. They spread abroad such
sinister reports of my faith as well as of my life that they turned
even my best friends against me, and those who still retained something
of their former regard for me were fain to disguise it in every
possible way by reason of their fear of these two men.
God is my witness that whensoever I learned of the convening of a new
assemblage of the clergy, I believed that it was done for the express
purpose of my condemnation. Stunned by this fear like one smitten with
a thunderbolt, I daily expected to be dragged before their councils or
assemblies as a heretic or one guilty of impiety. Though I seem to
compare a flea with a lion, or an ant with an elephant, in very truth
my rivals persecuted me no less bitterly than the heretics of old
hounded St. Athanasius. Often, God knows, I sank so deep in despair
that I was ready to leave the world of Christendom and go forth among
the heathen, paying them a stipulated tribute in order that I might
live quietly a Christian life among the enemies of Christ. It seemed to
me that such people might indeed be kindly disposed toward me,
particularly as they would doubtless suspect me of being no good
Christian, imputing my flight to some crime I had committed, and would
therefore believe that I might perhaps be won over to their form of
worship.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER XIII
OF THE ABBEY TO WHICH HE WAS CALLED AND OF THE PERSECUTION HE HAD FROM HIS
SONS, THAT IS TO SAY THE MONKS, AND FROM THE LORD OF THE LAND
While I was thus afflicted with so great perturbation of the spirit,
and when the only way of escape seemed to be for me to seek refuge with
Christ among the enemies of Christ, there came a chance whereby I
thought I could for a while avoid the plottings of my enemies. But
thereby I fell among Christians and monks who were far more savage than
heathens and more evil of life. The thing came about in this wise.
There was in lesser Brittany, in the bishopric of Vannes, a certain
abbey of St. Gildas at Ruits, then mourning the death of its shepherd.
To this abbey the elective choice of the brethren called me, with the
approval of the prince of that land, and I easily secured permission to
accept the post from my own abbot and brethren. Thus did the hatred of
the French drive me westward, even as that of the Romans drove Jerome
toward the East. Never, God knows, would I have agreed to this thing
had it not been for my longing for any possible means of escape from
the sufferings which I had borne so constantly.
The land was barbarous and its speech was unknown to me; as for the
monks, their vile and untameable way of life was notorious almost
everywhere. The people of the region, too, were uncivilized and
lawless. Thus, like one who in terror of the sword that threatens him
dashes headlong over a precipice, and to shun one death for a moment
rushes to another, I knowingly sought this new danger in order to
escape from the former one. And there, amid the dreadful roar of the
waves of the sea, where the land’s end left me no further refuge in
flight, often in my prayers did I repeat over and over again: “From the
end of the earth will I cry unto Thee, when my heart is overwhelmed”
(Ps. lxi, 2).
No one, methinks, could fail to understand how persistently that
undisciplined body of monks, the direction of which I had thus
undertaken, tortured my heart day and night, or how constantly I was
compelled to think of the danger alike to my body and to my soul. I
held it for certain that if I should try to force them to live
according to the principles they had themselves professed, I should not
survive. And yet, if I did not do this to the utmost of my ability, I
saw that my damnation was assured. Moreover, a certain lord who was
exceedingly powerful in that region had some time previously brought
the abbey under his control, taking advantage of the state of disorder
within the monastery to seize all the lands adjacent thereto for his
own use, and he ground down the monks with taxes heavier than those
which were extorted from the Jews themselves.
The monks pressed me to supply them with their daily necessities, but
they held no property in common which I might administer in their
behalf, and each one, with such resources as he possessed, supported
himself and his concubines, as well as his sons and daughters. They
took delight in harassing me on this matter, and they stole and carried
off whatsoever they could lay their hands on, to the end that my
failure to maintain order might make me either give up trying to
enforce discipline or else abandon my post altogether. Since the entire
region was equally savage, lawless and disorganized, there was not a
single man to whom I could turn for aid, for the habits of all alike
were foreign to me. Outside the monastery the lord and his henchmen
ceaselessly hounded me, and within its walls the brethren were forever
plotting against me, so that it seemed as if the Apostle had had me and
none other in mind when he said: “Without were fightings, within were
fears” (II Cor. vii, 5).
I considered and lamented the uselessness and the wretchedness of my
existence, how fruitless my life now was, both to myself and to others;
how of old I had been of some service to the clerics whom I had now
abandoned for the sake of these monks, so that I was no longer able to
be of use to either; how incapable I had proved myself in everything I
had undertaken or attempted, so that above all others I deserved the
reproach, “This man began to build, and was not able to finish” (Luke
xiv, 30). My despair grew still deeper when I compared the evils I had
left behind with those to which I had come, for my former sufferings
now seemed to me as nought. Full often did I groan: “Justly has this
sorrow come upon me because I deserted the Paraclete, which is to say
the Consoler, and thrust myself into sure desolation; seeking to shun
threats I fled to certain peril.”
The thing which tormented me most was the fact that, having abandoned
my oratory, I could make no suitable provision for the celebration
there of the divine office, for indeed the extreme poverty of the place
would scarcely provide the necessities of one man. But the true
Paraclete Himself brought me real consolation in the midst of this
sorrow of mine, and made all due provision for His own oratory. For it
chanced that in some manner or other, laying claim to it as having
legally belonged in earlier days to his monastery, my abbot of St.
Denis got possession of the abbey of Argenteuil, of which I have
previously spoken, wherein she who was now my sister in Christ rather
than my wife, Héloïse, had taken the veil. From this abbey he expelled
by force all the nuns who had dwelt there, and of whom my former
companion had become the prioress. The exiles being thus dispersed in
various places, I perceived that this was an opportunity presented by
God himself to me whereby I could make provision anew for my oratory.
And so, returning thither, I bade her come to the oratory, together
with some others from the same convent who had clung to her.
On their arrival there I made over to them the oratory, together with
everything pertaining thereto, and subsequently, through the approval
and assistance of the bishop of the district, Pope Innocent II
promulgated a decree confirming my gift in perpetuity to them and their
successors. And this refuge of divine mercy, which they served so
devotedly, soon brought them consolation, even though at first their
life there was one of want, and for a time of utter destitution. But
the place proved itself a true Paraclete to them, making all those who
dwelt round about feel pity and kindliness for the sisterhood. So that,
methinks, they prospered more through gifts in a single year than I
should have done if I had stayed there a hundred. True it is that the
weakness of womankind makes their needs and sufferings appeal strongly
to people’s feelings, as likewise it makes their virtue all the more
pleasing to God and man. And God granted such favour in the eyes of all
to her who was now my sister, and who was in authority over the rest,
that the bishops loved her as a daughter, the abbots as a sister, and
the laity as a mother. All alike marvelled at her religious zeal, her
good judgment and the sweetness of her incomparable patience in all
things. The less often she allowed herself to be seen, shutting herself
up in her cell to devote herself to sacred meditations and prayers, the
more eagerly did those who dwelt without demand her presence and the
spiritual guidance of her words.
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER XIV
OF THE EVIL REPORT OF HIS INIQUITY
Before long all those who dwelt thereabouts began to censure me
roundly, complaining that I paid far less attention to their needs than
I might and should have done, and that at least I could do something
for them through my preaching. As a result, I returned thither
frequently, to be of service to them in whatsoever way I could.
Regarding this there was no lack of hateful murmuring, and the thing
which sincere charity induced me to do was seized upon by the
wickedness of my detractors as the subject of shameless outcry. They
declared that I, who of old could scarcely endure to be parted from her
I loved, was still swayed by the delights of fleshly lust. Many times I
thought of the complaint of St. Jerome in his letter to Asella
regarding those women whom he was falsely accused of loving, when he
said (Epist. xcix): “I am charged with nothing save the fact of my sex,
and this charge is made only because Paula is setting forth to
Jerusalem.” And again: “Before I became intimate in the household of
the saintly Paula, the whole city was loud in my praise, and nearly
every one deemed me deserving of the highest honours of priesthood. But
I know that my way to the kingdom of Heaven lies through good and evil
report alike.”
When I pondered over the injury which slander had done to so great a
man as this, I was not a little consoled thereby. If my rivals, I told
myself, could but find an equal cause for suspicion against me, with
what accusations would they persecute me! But how is it possible for
such suspicion to continue in my case, seeing that divine mercy has
freed me therefrom by depriving me of all power to enact such baseness?
How shameless is this latest accusation! In truth that which had
happened to me so completely removes all suspicion of this iniquity
among all men that those who wish to have their women kept under close
guard employ eunuchs for that purpose, even as sacred history tells
regarding Esther and the other damsels of King Ahasuerus (Esther ii,
5). We read, too, of that eunuch of great authority under Queen Candace
who had charge of all her treasure, him to whose conversion and baptism
the apostle Philip was directed by an angel (Acts viii, 27). Such men,
in truth, are enabled to have far more importance and intimacy among
modest and upright women by the fact that they are free from any
suspicion of lust.
The sixth book of the Ecclesiastical History tells us that the greatest
of all Christian philosophers, Origen, inflicted a like injury on
himself with his own hand, in order that all suspicion of this nature
might be completely done away with in his instruction of women in
sacred doctrine. In this respect, I thought, God’s mercy had been
kinder to me than to him, for it was judged that he had acted most
rashly and had exposed himself to no slight censure, whereas the thing
had been done to me through the crime of another, thus preparing me for
a task similar to his own. Moreover, it had been accomplished with much
less pain, being so quick and sudden, for I was heavy with sleep when
they laid hands on me, and felt scarcely any pain at all.
But alas, I thought, the less I then suffered from the wound, the
greater is my punishment now through slander, and I am tormented far
more by the loss of my reputation than I was by that of part of my
body. For thus is it written: “A good name is rather to be chosen than
great riches” (Prov. xxii, 1). And as St. Augustine tells us in a
sermon of his on the life and conduct of the clergy, “He is cruel who,
trusting in his conscience, neglects his reputation.” Again he says:
“Let us provide those things that are good, as the apostle bids us
(Rom. xii, 17), not alone in the eyes of God, but likewise in the eyes
of men. Within himself each one’s conscience suffices, but for our own
sakes our reputations ought not to be tarnished, but to flourish.
Conscience and reputation are different matters: conscience is for
yourself, reputation for your neighbour.” Methinks the spite of such
men as these my enemies would have accused the very Christ Himself, or
those belonging to Him, prophets and apostles, or the other holy
fathers, if such spite had existed in their time, seeing that they
associated in such familiar intercourse with women, and this though
they were whole of body. On this point St. Augustine, in his book on
the duty of monks, proves that women followed our Lord Jesus Christ and
the apostles as inseparable companions, even accompanying them when
they preached (Chap. 4). “Faithful women,” he says, “who were possessed
of worldly wealth went with them, and ministered to them out of their
wealth, so that they might lack none of those things which belong to
the substance of life.” And if any one does not believe that the
apostles thus permitted saintly women to go about with them wheresoever
they preached the Gospel, let him listen to the Gospel itself, and
learn therefrom that in so doing they followed the example of the Lord.
For in the Gospel it is written thus: “And it came to pass afterward,
that He went throughout every city and village, preaching and showing
the glad tidings of the kingdom of God: and the twelve were with Him,
and certain women, which had been healed of evil spirits and
infirmities, Mary called Magdalene, and Joanna the wife of Chuza,
Herod’s steward, and Susanna, and many others, which ministered unto
Him of their substance” (Luke viii, 1-3).
Leo the Ninth, furthermore, in his reply to the letter of Parmenianus
concerning monastic zeal, says: “We unequivocally declare that it is
not permissible for a bishop, priest, deacon or subdeacon to cast off
all responsibility for his own wife on the grounds of religious duty,
so that he no longer provides her with food and clothing; albeit he may
not have carnal intercourse with her. We read that thus did the holy
apostles act, for St. Paul says: ‘Have we not power to lead about a
sister, a wife, as well as other apostles, and as the brethren of the
Lord, and Cephas?’ (I Cor. ix, 5). Observe, foolish man, that he does
not say: ‘have we not power to embrace a sister, a wife,’ but he says
‘to lead about,’ meaning thereby that such women may lawfully be
supported by them out of the wages of their preaching, but that there
must be no carnal bond between them.”
Certainly that Pharisee who spoke within himself of the Lord, saying:
“This man, if He were a prophet, would have known who and what manner
of woman this is that toucheth Him: for she is a sinner” (Luke vii,
39), might much more reasonably have suspected baseness of the Lord,
considering the matter from a purely human standpoint, than my enemies
could suspect it of me. One who had seen the mother of Our Lord
entrusted to the care of the young man (John xix, 27), or who had
beheld the prophets dwelling and sojourning with widows (I Kings xvii,
10), would likewise have had a far more logical ground for suspicion.
And what would my calumniators have said if they had but seen Malchus,
that captive monk of whom St. Jerome writes, living in the same but
with his wife? Doubtless they would have regarded it as criminal in the
famous scholar to have highly commended what he thus saw, saying
thereof: “There was a certain old man named Malchus, a native of this
region, and his wife with him in his hut. Both of them were earnestly
religious, and they so often passed the threshold of the church that
you might have thought them the Zacharias and Elisabeth of the Gospel,
saving only that John was not with them.”
Why, finally, do such men refrain from slandering the holy fathers, of
whom we frequently read, nay, and have even seen with our own eyes,
founding convents for women and making provision for their maintenance,
thereby following the example of the seven deacons whom the apostles
sent before them to secure food and take care of the women? (Acts vi,
5). For the weaker sex needs the help of the stronger one to such an
extent that the apostle proclaimed that the head of the woman is ever
the man (I Cor. xi, 3), and in sign thereof he bade her ever wear her
head covered (ib. 5). For this reason I marvel greatly at the customs
which have crept into monasteries, whereby, even as abbots are placed
in charge of the men, abbesses now are given authority over the women,
and the women bind themselves in their vows to accept the same rules as
the men. Yet in these rules there are many things which cannot possibly
be carried out by women, either as superiors or in the lower orders. In
many places we may even behold an inversion of the natural order of
things, whereby the abbesses and nuns have authority over the clergy,
and even over those who are themselves in charge of the people. The
more power such women exercise over men, the more easily can they lead
them into iniquitous desires, and in this way can lay a very heavy yoke
upon their shoulders. It was with such things in mind that the satirist
said:
“There is nothing more intolerable than a rich woman.”
(Juvenal, Sat. VI, v, 459).
__________________________________________________________________
CHAPTER XV
OF THE PERILS OF HIS ABBEY AND OF THE REASONS FOR THE WRITING OF THIS HIS
LETTER
Reflecting often upon all these things, I determined to make provision
for those sisters and to undertake their care in every way I could.
Furthermore, in order that they might have the greater reverence for
me, I arranged to watch over them in person. And since now the
persecution carried on by my sons was greater and more incessant than
that which I formerly suffered at the hands of my brethren, I returned
frequently to the nuns, fleeing the rage of the tempest as to a haven
of peace. There, indeed, could I draw breath for a little in quiet, and
among them my labours were fruitful, as they never were among the
monks. All this was of the utmost benefit to me in body and soul, and
it was equally essential for them by reason of their weakness.
But now has Satan beset me to such an extent that I no longer know
where I may find rest, or even so much as live. I am driven hither and
yon, a fugitive and a vagabond, even as the accursed Cain (Gen. iv,
14). I have already said that “without were fightings, within were
fears” (II Cor. vii, 5), and these torture me ceaselessly, the fears
being indeed without as well as within, and the fightings wheresoever
there are fears. Nay, the persecution carried on by my sons rages
against me more perilously and continuously than that of my open
enemies, for my sons I have always with me, and I am ever exposed to
their treacheries. The violence of my enemies I see in the danger to my
body if I leave the cloister; but within it I am compelled incessantly
to endure the crafty machinations as well as the open violence of those
monks who are called my sons, and who are entrusted to me as their
abbot, which is to say their father.
Oh, how often have they tried to kill me with poison, even as the monks
sought to slay St. Benedict! Methinks the same reason which led the
saint to abandon his wicked sons might encourage me to follow the
example of so great a father, lest, in thus exposing myself to certain
peril, I might be deemed a rash tempter of God rather than a lover of
Him, nay, lest it might even be judged that I had thereby taken my own
life. When I had safeguarded myself to the best of my ability, so far
as my food and drink were concerned, against their daily plottings,
they sought to destroy me in the very ceremony of the altar by putting
poison in the chalice. One day, when I had gone to Nantes to visit the
count, who was then sick, and while I was sojourning awhile in the
house of one of my brothers in the flesh, they arranged to poison me,
with the connivance of one of my attendants, believing that I would
take no precautions to escape such a plot. But divine providence so
ordered matters that I had no desire for the food which was set before
me; one of the monks whom I had brought with me ate thereof, not
knowing that which had been done, and straightway fell dead. As for the
attendant who had dared to undertake this crime, he fled in terror
alike of his own conscience and of the clear evidence of his guilt.
After this, as their wickedness was manifest to every one, I began
openly in every way I could to avoid the danger with which their plots
threatened me, even to the extent of leaving the abbey and dwelling
with a few others apart in little cells. If the monks knew beforehand
that I was going anywhere on a journey, they bribed bandits to waylay
me on the road and kill me. And while I was struggling in the midst of
these dangers, it chanced one day that the hand of the Lord smote me a
heavy blow, for I fell from my horse, breaking a bone in my neck, the
injury causing me greater pain and weakness than my former wound.
Using excommunication as my weapon to coerce the untamed rebelliousness
of the monks, I forced certain ones among them whom I particularly
feared to promise me publicly, pledging their faith or swearing upon
the sacrament, that they would thereafter depart from the abbey and no
longer trouble me in any way. Shamelessly and openly did they violate
the pledges they had given and their sacramental oaths, but finally
they were compelled to give this and many other promises under oath, in
the presence of the count and the bishops, by the authority of the
Pontiff of Rome, Innocent, who sent his own legate for this special
purpose. And yet even this did not bring me peace. For when I returned
to the abbey after the expulsion of those whom I have just mentioned,
and entrusted myself to the remaining brethren, of whom I felt less
suspicion, I found them even worse than the others. I barely succeeded
in escaping them, with the aid of a certain nobleman of the district,
for they were planning, not to poison me indeed, but to cut my throat
with a sword. Even to the present time I stand face to face with this
danger, fearing the sword which threatens my neck so that I can
scarcely draw a free breath between one meal and the next. Even so do
we read of him who, reckoning the power and heaped-up wealth of the
tyrant Dionysius as a great blessing, beheld the sword secretly hanging
by a hair above his head, and so learned what kind of happiness comes
as the result of worldly power (Cicer. 5, Tusc.) Thus did I too learn
by constant experience, I who had been exalted from the condition of a
poor monk to the dignity of an abbot, that my wretchedness increased
with my wealth; and I would that the ambition of those who voluntarily
seek such power might be curbed by my example.
And now, most dear brother in Christ and comrade closest to me in the
intimacy of speech, it should suffice for your sorrows and the
hardships you have endured that I have written this story of my own
misfortunes, amid which I have toiled almost from the cradle. For so,
as I said in the beginning of this letter, shall you come to regard
your tribulation as nought, or at any rate as little, in comparison
with mine, and so shall you bear it more lightly in measure as you
regard it as less. Take comfort ever in the saying of Our Lord, what he
foretold for his followers at the hands of the followers of the devil:
“If they have persecuted me, they will also persecute you (John xv,
20). If the world hate you, ye know that it hated me before it hated
you. If ye were of the world, the world would love his own” (ib.
18-19). And the apostle says: “All that will live godly in Christ Jesus
shall suffer persecution” (II Tim. iii, 12). And elsewhere he says: “I
do not seek to please men. For if I yet pleased men, I should not be
the servant of Christ” (Galat. i, 10). And the Psalmist says: “They who
have been pleasing to men have been confounded, for that God hath
despised them.”
Commenting on this, St. Jerome, whose heir methinks I am in the
endurance of foul slander, says in his letter to Nepotanius: “The
apostle says: ‘If I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of
Christ.’ He no longer seeks to please men, and so is made Christ’s
servant” (Epist. 2). And again, in his letter to Asella regarding those
whom he was falsely accused of loving: “I give thanks to my God that I
am worthy to be one whom the world hates” (Epist. 99). And to the monk
Heliodorus he writes: “You are wrong, brother, you are wrong if you
think there is ever a time when the Christian does not suffer
persecution. For our adversary goes about as a roaring lion seeking
what he may devour, and do you still think of peace? Nay, he lieth in
ambush among the rich.”
Inspired by those records and examples, we should endure our
persecutions all the more steadfastly the more bitterly they harm us.
We should not doubt that even if they are not according to our deserts,
at least they serve for the purifying of our soul. And since all things
are done in accordance with the divine ordering, let every one of true
faith console himself amid all his afflictions with the thought that
the great goodness of God permits nothing to be done without reason,
and brings to a good end whatsoever may seem to happen wrongfully.
Wherefore rightly do all men say: “Thy will be done.” And great is the
consolation to all lovers of God in the word of the Apostle when he
says: “We know that all things work together for good to them that love
God” (Rom. viii, 28). The wise man of old had this in mind when he said
in his Proverbs: “There shall no evil happen to the just” (Prov. xii,
21). By this he clearly shows that whosoever grows wrathful for any
reason against his sufferings has therein departed from the way of the
just, because he may not doubt that these things have happened to him
by divine dispensation. Even such are those who yield to their own
rather than to the divine purpose, and with hidden desires resist the
spirit which echoes in the words, “Thy will be done,” thus placing
their own will ahead of the will of God. Farewell.
__________________________________________________________________
APPENDIX
PIERRE ABÉLARD
Petrus Abaelardus (or Abailardus) was born in the year 1079 at Palets,
a Breton town not far from Nantes. His father, Berengarius, was a
nobleman of some local importance; his mother, Lucia, was likewise of
noble family. The name “Abaelardus” is said to be a corruption of
“Habelardus,” which, in turn, was substituted by himself for the
nickname “Bajolardus” given to him in his student days. However the
name may have arisen, the famous scholar certainly adopted it very
early in his career, and it went over into the vernacular as “Abélard”
or “Abailard,” though with a multiplicity of variations (in Villon’s
famous poem, for example, it appears as “Esbaillart”).
For the main facts of Abélard’s life his own writings remain the best
authority, but through his frequent contact with many of the foremost
figures in the intellectual and clerical life of the early twelfth
century it has been possible to check his own account of his career
with considerable accuracy. The story told in the “Historia
Calamitatum” covers the events of his life from boyhood to about 1132
or 1133,—in other words, up to approximately his fifty-third or
fifty-fourth year. That the account he gives of himself is
substantially correct cannot be doubted; making all due allowance for
the violence of his feelings, which certainly led him to colour many
incidents in a manner unfavourable to his enemies, the main facts tally
closely with all the external evidence now available.
A very brief summary of the events of the final years of his life will
serve to round out the story. The “Historia Calamitatum” was written
while Abélard was still abbot of the monastery of St. Gildas, in
Brittany. The terrors of his existence there are fully dwelt on in his
autobiographical letter, and finally, in 1134 or 1135, he fled, living
for a short time in retirement. In 1136, however, we find him once more
lecturing, and apparently with much of his former success, on Mont Ste.
Geneviève. His old enemies were still on his trail, and most of all
Bernard of Clairvaux, to whose fiery adherence to the faith Abélard’s
rationalism seemed a sheer desecration. The unceasing activities of
Bernard and others finally brought Abélard before an ecclesiastical
council at Sens in 1140, where he was formally arraigned on charges of
heresy. Had Abélard’s courage held good, he might have won his case,
for Bernard was frankly terrified at the prospect of meeting so
formidable a dialectitian, but Abélard, broken in spirit by the
prolonged persecution from which he had suffered, contented himself
with appealing to the Pope. The indefatigable Bernard at once proceeded
to secure a condemnation of Abélard from Rome, whither the accused man
set out to plead his case. On the way, however, he collapsed, both
physically and in spirit, and remained for a few months at the abbey of
Cluny, whence his friends removed him, a dying man, to the priory of
St. Marcel, near Châlons-sur-Saône. Here he died on April 21, 1142.
A discussion of Abélard’s position among the scholastic philosophers
would necessarily go far beyond the proper limits of a mere historical
note. He stands out less commandingly as a constructive philosopher
than as a master of dialectics. He was, as even his enemies admitted, a
brilliant teacher and an unconquerable logician; he was, moreover, a
voluminous writer. Works by him which have been preserved include
letters, sermons, philosophical and religious treatises, commentaries
on the Bible, on Aristotle and on various other books, and a number of
poems.
Many of the misfortunes which the “Historia Calamitatum” relates were
the direct outcome of Abélard’s uncompromising position as a
rationalist, and the document is above all interesting for the picture
it gives of the man himself, against the background of early twelfth
century France. A few dates will help the general reader to connect the
life surrounding Abélard with other and more familiar facts. William
the Conqueror had entered England thirteen years before Abélard’s
birth. The boy was eight years old when the Conqueror died near Rouen
during his struggle with Philip of France. He was seventeen when the
First Crusade began, and twenty when the crusaders captured Jerusalem.
Two of the men who most profoundly influenced the times in which
Abélard lived were Hildebrand, famous as Pope Gregory VII, and Louis VI
(the Fat), king of France. It was to Hildebrand that the Church owed
much of that regeneration of the spirit which gave it such vitality
throughout the twelfth century. Hildebrand died, indeed, when Abélard
was only six years old, but he left the Church such a force in the
affairs of men as it had never been before. As for Louis the Fat, who
reigned from 1108 to 1137, it was he who began to lift the royal power
in France out of the shadow which the slothfulness and incompetence of
his immediate predecessors, Henry I and Philip I, had cast over it.
Discerning enough to see that the chief enemies of the crown were the
great nobles, and constantly advised by a minister of exceptional
wisdom, Suger, abbot of St. Denis, Louis did his utmost to protect the
towns and the churches, and to bring that small part of France wherein
his power was felt out of the anarchy and chaos of the eleventh
century.
It was the France of Louis VI and Sager which formed the background for
the great battle between the realists and the nominalists, the battle
in which Abélard played no small part. His life was divided between the
towns wherein he taught and the Church which alternately welcomed and
denounced him. His fellow-disputants have their places in the history
of philosophy; the story of Abélard’s love for Héloïse has set him
apart, so that he has lived for eight centuries less as a fearless
thinker and masterly logician than as one of the glowingly romantic
figures of the Middle Ages.
“A FRIEND”
It is not known to whom Abélard’s letter was addressed, but it may be
guessed that the writer intended it to reach the hands of Héloïse. This
actually happened, and the first and most famous letter from Héloïse to
Abélard was substantially an answer to the “Historia Calamitatum.”
WILLIAM OF CHAMPEAUX
William of Champeaux (Gulielmus Campellensis) was born about 1070 at
Champeaux, near Melun. He studied under Anselm of Laon and Roscellinus,
his training in philosophy thereby being influenced by both realism and
nominalism. His own inclination, however, was strongly towards the
former, and it was as a determined proponent of realism that he began
to teach in the school of the cathedral of Notre Dame, of which he was
made canon in 1103. In 1108 he withdrew to the abbey of St. Victor, and
subsequently became bishop of Châlons-sur-Marne. He died in 1121. As a
teacher his influence was wide; he was a vigorous defender of orthodoxy
and a passionate adversary of the heterodox philosophy of his former
master, Roscellinus. That he and Abélard disagreed was only natural,
but Abélard’s statement that he argued William into abandoning the
basic principles of his philosophy is certainly untrue.
“THE UNIVERSALS”
It is not within the province of such a note as this to discuss in
detail the great controversy between the realists and the nominalists
which dominated the philosophical and, to some extent, the religious
thought of France during the first half of the twelfth century. In
brief, the realists maintained that the idea is a reality distinct from
and independent of the individuals constituting it; their motto,
Universalia sunt realia, was readily capable of extension far beyond
the Church, and William of Champeaux himself carried it to the extent
of arguing that nothing is real but the universal. The nominalists, on
the other hand, argued that “universals” are mere notions of the mind,
and that individuals alone are real; their motto was Universalia sunt
nomina. Thus the central question in the long controversy concerned the
reality of abstract or incorporate ideas, and it is to be observed that
the realists held views diametrically opposite to those which the word
“realism” today implies. In upholding the reality of the idea, they
were what would now be called idealists, whereas their opponents,
denying the reality of abstractions and insisting on that of the
concrete individual or object, were realists in the modern sense.
The peculiar importance of this controversy lay in its effect on the
status of the Church. If nominalism should prevail, then the Church
would be shorn of much of its authority, for its greatest power lay in
the conception of it as an enduring reality outside of and above all
the individuals who shared in its work. It is not strange, then, that
the ardent realism of William of Champeaux should have been outraged by
the nominalistic logic of Abélard. Abélard, indeed, never went to such
extreme lengths as the arch-nominalist, Roscellinus, who was duly
condemned for heresy by the Council of Soissons in 1092, but he went
quite far enough to win for himself the undying enmity of the leading
realists, who were followed by the great majority of the clergy.
PORPHYRY
The Introduction (“Isagoge”) to the Categories of Aristotle, Written by
the Greek scholar and neoplatonist Porphyry in the third century A.D.,
was translated into Latin by Boetius, and in this form was extensively
used throughout the Middle Ages as a compendium of Aristotelian logic.
As a philosopher Porphyry was chiefly important as the immediate
successor of Plotinus in the neoplatonic school at Rome, but his
“Isagoge” had extraordinary weight among the medieval logicians.
PRISCIAN
The Institutiones grammaticae of Priscian (Priscianus Caesariensis)
formed the standard grammatical and philological textbook of the Middle
Ages, its importance being fairly indicated by the fact that today
there exist about a thousand manuscript copies of it.
ANSELM
Anselm of Laon was born somewhere about 1040, and is said to have
studied under the famous St. Anselm, later archbishop of Canterbury, at
the monastery of Bec. About 1070 he began to teach in Paris, where he
was notably successful. Subsequently he returned to Laon, where his
school of theology and exegetics became the most famous one in Europe.
His most important work, an interlinear gloss on the Scriptures, was
regarded as authoritative throughout the later Middle Ages. He died in
1117. That he was something of a pedant is probable, but Abélard’s
picture of him is certainly very far from doing him justice.
ALBERIC OF RHEIMS AND LOTULPHE THE LOMBARD
Of these two not much is known beyond what Abélard himself tells us.
ALberic, indeed, won a considerable reputation, and was highly
recommended to Pope Honorius II by St. Bernard. In 1139 Alberic seems
to have become archbishop of Bourges, dying two years later. Lotulphe
the Lombard is referred to by another authority as Leutaldus
Novariensis.
ST. JEROME
The enormous scholarship of St. Jerome, born about 340 and dying
September 30, 420, made him not only the foremost authority within the
Church itself throughout the Middle Ages, but also one of the chief
guides to secular scholarship. Abélard repeatedly quotes from him,
particularly from his denunciation of the revival of Gnostic heresies
by Jovinianus and from some of his voluminous epistles. He also refers
extensively to the charges brought against Jerome by reason of his
teaching of women at Rome in the house of Marcella. One of his pupils,
Paula, a wealthy widow, followed him on his journey through Palestine,
and built three nunneries at Bethlehem, of which she remained the head
up to the time of her death in 404.
ST. AUGUSTINE
Regarding the position of St. Augustine (354-430) throughout the Middle
Ages, it is here sufficient to quote a few words of Gustav Krueger:
“The theological position and influence of Augustine may be said to be
unrivalled. No single name has ever exercised such power over the
Christian Church, and no one mind ever made so deep an impression on
Christian thought. In him scholastics and mystics, popes and opponents
of the papal supremacy, have seen their champion. He was the fulcrum on
which Luther rested the thoughts by which be sought to lift the past of
the Church out of the rut; yet the judgment of Catholics still
proclaims the ideals of Augustine as the only sound basis of
philosophy.”
ABBEY OF ST. DENIS
The abbey of St. Denis was founded about 625 by Dagobert, son of
Lothair II, at some distance from the basilica which the clergy of
Paris had erected in the fifth century over the saint’s tomb. Long
renowned as the place of burial for most of the kings of France, the
abbey of St. Denis had a particular importance in Abélard’s day by
reason of its close association with the reigning monarch. The abbot to
whom Abélard refers so bitterly was Adam of St. Denis, who began his
rule of the monastery about 1094. In 1106 this same Adam chose as his
secretary one of the inmates of the monastery, Suger, destined shortly
to become the most influential man in France through his position as
advisor to Louis VI, and also the foremost historian of his time. Adam
died in 1123, and his successor, referred to by Abélard in Chapter X,
was none other than Suger himself. From 1127 to 1137 Suger devoted most
of his time to the reorganization and reform of the monastery of St.
Denis. If we are to believe Abélard, such reform was sorely needed, but
other contemporary evidence by no means fully sustains Abélard in his
condemnation of Adam and his fellow monks.
ORIGEN
The Alexandrian theological writer Origen, who lived from about 185 to
254, was the most distinguished and the most influential of all the
theologians of the ancient Church, with the single exception of
Augustine. His incredible industry resulted in such a mass of Writings
that Jerome himself asked in despair, “Which of us can read all that he
has written?” Origen’s self-mutilation, referred to by Abélard, was
subsequently used by his enemies as an argument for deposing him from
his presbyterial status.
ATHANASIUS
Abélard’s tract regarding the power of God to create Himself was one of
the many distant echoes of the great Arian-Athanasian controversy of
the fourth century. St. Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, well deserved
the title conferred on him by the Church as “the father of orthodoxy,”
and it was by his name that the doctrine of identity of substance (“the
Son is of the same substance with the Father”) became known. Much of
the life of Athanasius was passed amid persecutions at the hands of his
enemies, and on several occasions he was driven into exile.
RODOLPHE, ARCHBISHOP OF RHEIMS
Rodolphe, or, as some authorities call him, Rudolph or Radulph, became
archbishop of Rheims in 1114, after having served as treasurer of the
cathedral. His importance among the French clergy is attested by the
many references to him in contemporary documents.
CONON OF PRAENESTE
Conon, bishop of Praeneste, whose real name may have been Conrad, came
to France as papal legate on at least two occasions. He represented
Paschal II in 1115 at ecclesiastical councils held in Beauvais, Rheims
and Châlons; in 1120 he represented Calixtus II at Soissons on the
occasion of Abélard’s trial.
GEOFFROI OF CHARTRES
Geoffroi, bishop of Chartres, the second of the name to hold that post,
was subsequently a warm friend of St. Bernard. Abélard’s high estimate
of him is fully confirmed by other contemporary authorities.
ABBOT OF ST. MEDARD
This abbot was probably, though not certainly, Anselm of Soissons, who
became a bishop in 1145. The chronology, however, is confusing.
DIONYSIUS THE AREOPAGITE
The confusion regarding the identity of Dionysius the Areopagite
persists to this day, at least to the extent that we do not know the
real name of the fourth or fifth century writer who, under this
pseudonym, exercised so profound an influence on medieval thought. That
he was not the bishop of either Athens or Corinth, nor yet the
Dionysius who became the patron saint of France, is clear enough. Of
the actual Dionysius the Areopagite we know practically nothing. He is
mentioned in Acts xvii, 34, as one of those Athenians who believed when
they had heard Paul preach on Mars Hill. A century or more later we
learn from another Dionysius, bishop of Corinth, that Dionysius the
Areopagite was the first bishop of Athens, a statement of doubtful
value. In the fourth or fifth century a Greek theological writer of
extraordinary erudition assumed the name of Dionysius the Areopagite,
and as his works exerted an enormous influence on later scholarship, it
was quite natural that the personal legend of the real Dionysius should
have been extended correspondingly.
The Hilduin referred to by Abélard, who was abbot of St. Denis from 814
to 840, was directly responsible for the extreme phase of this
extension. Accepting, as most of his contemporaries unquestioningly
did, the identity of the theological writer with the Dionysius
mentioned in Acts and spoken of as bishop of Athens, Hilduin went one
step further, and demonstrated that this Dionysius was likewise the
Dionysius (Denis) who had been sent into Gaul and martyred at
Catulliacus, the modern St. Denis. There is no evidence to support
Hilduin’s contention, and the chronology of Gregory of Tours is quite
sufficient to disprove it, but none the less it was enthusiastically
accepted in France, and above all by the monks of St. Denis.
There was, however, a persistent doubt as to the identity of the
Dionysius whose writings had become so famous. Bede, the authority
quoted by Abélard, was, of course, wrong in saying that he was the
bishop of Corinth, but anything which tended to shake the triple
identity, established by Hilduin, of the Dionysius of Athens who
listened to St. Paul, of the pseudo-Areopagite whose works were known
to every medieval scholar, and of the St. Denis who had become the
patron saint of France, was naturally anathematized by the monks who
bore the saint’s name. Bede and Abélard were by no means accurate, but
Bede’s inkling of the truth was quite enough to get Abélard into
serious trouble.
THEOBALD OF CHAMPAGNE
Theobald II, Count of Blois, Meaux and Champagne, was one of the most
powerful nobles in France, and by the extent of his influence fully
deserved the title of “the Great” by which he was subsequently known.
His domain included the modern departments of Ardennes, Marne, Aube and
Haute-Marne, with part of Aisne, Seine-et-Marne, Yonne and Meuse.
Furthermore, his mother Adela, was the daughter of William I of
England, and his younger brother, Stephen, was King of England from
1135 to 1154. Theobald became Count of Blois in 1102, Count of
Champagne in 1125, and Count of Troyes in 1128. Had he so chosen, he
might likewise have become Duke of Normandy after the death of his
uncle, Henry I of England, in 1135. He died in 1152.
STEPHEN THE SENESCHAL
There is much doubt as to whether this Stephen was Stephen de Garland,
dapifer, or another Stephen, who was royal chancellor under Louis the
Fat. A charter of the year 1124 is signed by both Stephen dapifer and
Stephen cancellarius. Probably, however, the authority identifying
Stephen dapifer as Stephen de Garland, seneschal of France, is
trustworthy.
THE PARACLETE
Among the terms which are characteristic of, or even peculiar to, the
Gospel of St. John is that of “the Paraclete,” rendered in the King
games version “the Comforter.” The Greek word of which “Paraclete” is a
reproduction literally means “advocate,” one called to aid; hence
“intercessor.” The doctrine of the Paraclete appears chiefly in John,
xiv and xv. For example: (xiv, 16-17) “And I will pray the Father, and
he shall give you another Comforter (Paraclete) that be may abide with
you for ever; even the spirit of truth.” Again: (xiv, 26) “But the
Comforter (Paraclete), which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will
send in my name, he shall teach you all things.” With John’s words as a
basis, the Paraclete came to be regarded as identical with the Third
Person of the Trinity, but always with the special attributes of
consolation and intercession.
NORBERT OF PRÉMONTRÉ
In 1120 there was established at Prémontré, a desert place in the
diocese of Laon, a monastery of canons regular who followed the
so-called Rule of St. Augustine, but with supplementary statutes which
made the life one of exceptional severity. The head of this monastery
was Norbert, subsequently canonized. His order received papal
approbation in 1126, and thereafter it spread rapidly throughout
Europe; two hundred years later there were no less than seventeen
hundred Norbertine or Premonstratensian monasteries. Norbert himself
became archbishop of Magdeburg, and it was in Germany that the most
notable work of his order was accomplished.
BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX
Regarding the illustrious St. Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux, it is
needless here to say more than that his own age recognized in him the
embodiment of the highest ideal of medieval monasticism. Intellectually
inferior to Abélard and to some others of those over whom he triumphed,
he was their superior in moral strength, in zeal, and above all in the
power of making others share his own enthusiasms. Born in 1090, he was
renowned as one of the foremost of French churchmen before he was
thirty years old; his share in the contest which followed the death of
Pope Honorius II in 1130 made him one of the most commanding figures in
all Europe. It was to him that the Cistercian order owed its
extraordinary expansion in the twelfth century. That Abélard should
have fallen before so redoubtable an adversary (see the note on Pierre
Abélard) is in no way surprising, but there can be no doubt that St.
Bernard’s “persecution” of Abélard was inspired solely by high ideals
and an intense zeal for the truth as Bernard perceived it.
ABBEY OF ST. GILDAS
Traditionally, at least, this abbey was the oldest one in Brittany.
According to the anonymous author of the Life and Deeds of St. Gildas,
it was founded during the reign of Childeric, the second of the
Merovingian kings, in the fifth century. Be that as it may, its
authentic history had been extensive before Abélard assumed the
direction of its affairs. His gruesome picture of the conditions which
prevailed there cannot, of course, be accepted as wholly accurate, but
even allowing for gross exaggeration, the life of the monks must have
been quite sufficiently scandalous. It was apparently in the closing
period of Abélard’s sojourn at the abbey of St. Gildas that he wrote
the “Historia Calamitatum.” He endured the life there for nearly ten
years; the date of his flight is not certain, but it cannot have been
far from 1134 or 1135.
LEO IX
Leo IX, pope from 1049 to 1054, was a native of Upper Alsace. It was at
the Easter synod of 1049 that he enjoined anew the celibacy of the
clergy, in connection with which the letter quoted by Abélard was
written.
__________________________________________________________________
Indexes
__________________________________________________________________
Index of Scripture References
Genesis
[1]4:14
Leviticus
[2]22:24
Deuteronomy
[3]23:1 [4]32:31
1 Kings
[5]17:10
Esther
[6]2:5
Psalms
[7]4:7
Proverbs
[8]12:21 [9]22:1
Jeremiah
[10]9:21
Daniel
[11]13:48
Matthew
[12]15:14 [13]25:15
Luke
[14]7:39 [15]8:1-3 [16]14:30
John
[17]7:51 [18]14:16 [19]14:16-17 [20]14:26 [21]15:18-19
[22]15:20 [23]19:27
Acts
[24]6:5 [25]8:27 [26]17:34
Romans
[27]8:28 [28]12:17
1 Corinthians
[29]6:17 [30]6:19 [31]7:27 [32]7:32 [33]8:1 [34]9:5
[35]11:3 [36]11:5
2 Corinthians
[37]1:3 [38]7:5 [39]7:5
Galatians
[40]1:10
2 Timothy
[41]3:13
__________________________________________________________________
Index of Latin Words and Phrases
* Cogito, ergo sum: [42]1
* Universalia sunt nomina: [43]1
* Universalia sunt realia: [44]1
* divinae scripturae doctores: [45]1
* humanae videlicet sapientiae amatores: [46]1
* propter seipsum existens: [47]1
__________________________________________________________________
This document is from the Christian Classics Ethereal
Library at Calvin College, http://www.ccel.org,
generated on demand from ThML source.
References
1. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Gen&scrCh=4&scrV=14#iii.xvi-p2.1
2. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Lev&scrCh=22&scrV=24#iii.ix-p2.1
3. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Deut&scrCh=23&scrV=1#iii.ix-p2.2
4. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Deut&scrCh=32&scrV=31#iii.x-p3.1
5. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Kgs&scrCh=17&scrV=10#iii.xv-p6.3
6. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Esth&scrCh=2&scrV=5#iii.xv-p2.1
7. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Ps&scrCh=4&scrV=7#iii.xi-p12.1
8. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Prov&scrCh=12&scrV=21#iii.xvi-p8.2
9. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Prov&scrCh=22&scrV=1#iii.xv-p4.1
10. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Jer&scrCh=9&scrV=21#iii.xii-p2.1
11. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Dan&scrCh=13&scrV=48#iii.xi-p2.1
12. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Matt&scrCh=15&scrV=14#iii.x-p1.1
13. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Matt&scrCh=25&scrV=15#iii.ix-p5.1
14. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Luke&scrCh=7&scrV=39#iii.xv-p6.1
15. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Luke&scrCh=8&scrV=1#iii.xv-p4.3
16. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Luke&scrCh=14&scrV=30#iii.xiv-p5.1
17. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=John&scrCh=7&scrV=51#iii.x-p8.1
18. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=John&scrCh=14&scrV=16#iii.xii-p7.2
19. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=John&scrCh=14&scrV=16#iii.xvii-p30.1
20. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=John&scrCh=14&scrV=26#iii.xvii-p30.2
21. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=John&scrCh=15&scrV=18#iii.xvi-p6.2
22. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=John&scrCh=15&scrV=20#iii.xvi-p6.1
23. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=John&scrCh=19&scrV=27#iii.xv-p6.2
24. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Acts&scrCh=6&scrV=5#iii.xv-p7.1
25. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Acts&scrCh=8&scrV=27#iii.xv-p2.2
26. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Acts&scrCh=17&scrV=34#iii.xvii-p25.1
27. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Rom&scrCh=8&scrV=28#iii.xvi-p8.1
28. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Rom&scrCh=12&scrV=17#iii.xv-p4.2
29. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Cor&scrCh=6&scrV=17#iii.xii-p9.1
30. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Cor&scrCh=6&scrV=19#iii.xii-p9.2
31. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Cor&scrCh=7&scrV=27#iii.viii-p2.1
32. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Cor&scrCh=7&scrV=32#iii.viii-p2.2
33. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Cor&scrCh=8&scrV=1#iii.vi-p2.1
34. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Cor&scrCh=9&scrV=5#iii.xv-p5.1
35. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Cor&scrCh=11&scrV=3#iii.xv-p7.2
36. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=1Cor&scrCh=11&scrV=5#iii.xv-p7.3
37. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=2Cor&scrCh=1&scrV=3#iii.xii-p7.1
38. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=2Cor&scrCh=7&scrV=5#iii.xiv-p4.1
39. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=2Cor&scrCh=7&scrV=5#iii.xvi-p2.2
40. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=Gal&scrCh=1&scrV=10#iii.xvi-p6.4
41. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3?scrBook=2Tim&scrCh=3&scrV=13#iii.xvi-p6.3
42. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3#ii-p17.1
43. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3#iii.xvii-p10.2
44. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3#iii.xvii-p10.1
45. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3#ii-p9.2
46. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3#ii-p9.1
47. file://localhost/ccel/a/abelard/misfortunes/cache/misfortunes.html3#ii-p4.1