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of Hohenbourg century.
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Fig. 1. TheMystic Ark as itmight have appeared if constructed at the convent twelfth
of Hohenbourg century.
Digital
during
the abbacy
reconstruction,
of Abbess
Herrad
Clement/Han/Rudolph.
in the late
ThreeStages of theArk FirstStage
CosmicComponents
H
Fig. 4. Rudolph.
The Mystic
Ark.
Earth,
air, ether,
and
the three
Second Stage ThirdStage
stages. Clement/
srS'?r_^_!-;-^i_l'.wi'?
Fig.
5.
The Mystic
Clement/Rudolph.
Ark.
Selected
components
of
the Ark
and
earth.
Fig. 8.
The Mystic Ark. The four ascents. Clement/Rudolph.
/:W
XXX
v:.\
/
X\
// ^V
Xx
Fig. 9.
77zeMystic
Ark. Quaternary
/
harmony.
Clement/Rudolph.
{ S pera coacftobti Al
f??Axt timUcraiitum
%$>?
lotisa> occi^m i\ |o?u> \ vtmtcndfeccaban r \ rt ?uudrc-tiunutttf
tic?nuiuf ronu^' ou.i ,mth;?fif>t? *Z
bictbifo tiUw&c mcogtita ?Afta
nundfflttnt
riduit ?c rtiKcttfci
iUuft%wia??? tit? rqpdlit'
(inobw~a nicrtcttan
motuUu lu btabitoti?
dtClfqiii) cciu?pu ?idem ttntmiv
tic?feA?um ti l? k*t | ?blujuumtot a??ufr-Oi?i*ut*
j^aurtdt?*
' tit ?amu
r nn?r
cit0
lrtrttnt?n/
iut?i?imo?tmr ab t?m\ born?
Fig.
Sphera Macrobii. Lambert of Saint-Omer, Liber Floridus. Herzog Ms. 1Gud. lat. fol. 16v. Bibliothek Wolfenb?ttel,
12.
August
" # 0? M
v
M
coi Fig.
13.
The Mystic
*J?j?
Ark. The central cubit. Clement/Rudolph.
Xt?I
jf?:.
'*?mn.y0/
Fig. 14. Macro/microcosm of Saint John Baptist College
(Byrhtferth's Diagram). The President and Scholars in the University of Oxford, Ms. 17:7v.
TRANSACTIONS of the
SOCIETY AMERICANPHILOSOPHICAL Held at Philadelphia For Promoting Useful Knowledge Volume
I FIND
"FIRST, CENTER
OF
THE
POINT": THE
READING HUGH
94, Part 4
SAINT
THE MYSTIC
TEXT
VICTOR'S ARK
Conrad Rudolph
American
Philosophical
Philadelphia
OF
Society
2004
Copyright ?2006 by the American Philosophical Society for its Transactions series. All rights
ISBN:
reserved.
0-87169-944-3
US ISSN: 0065-9746
of Congress
Library
Conrad,
Rudolph,
Data
Cataloging-in-Publication 1951
: the text of Hugh of Saint Victor's point reading The mystic ark / Conrad Rudolph. ? of the American ;v. 94, (Transactions p. cm. Philosophical Society First,
I find
pt.4) Includes
the center
bibliographical
ISBN 0-87169-944-3 1. Christian
and
index.
(paper)
art and
symbolism?France?Medieval, to 1800. 3. Hugh, of Saint-Victor,
works ogy?Early 4. Hugh, ark (Painting) 5. pretation. Mysticism Saint-Victor,
references
1096??1141.
of Saint-Victor,
1096??1141?Criticism
in art. 6. Lost works De
arca Noe
500-1500. 1096?-1141.
mystica.
of art?France. II. Title.
2. Theol Mystic and inter
I. Hugh, III. Series.
of
N7850.R78 2004 704.9'484?dc22
2004054542
To the memory
of Robert Benson
1925-1996 of medieval history, colleague, and friend
professor
CONTENTS
Preface
vii 1
Introduction
CHAPTER ONE. The text of TheMystic Ark as a reportatio 9 1. First suggestions
of the text of
Ark as a reportatio 2. The occasional lack of understanding The Mystic
the reporter
of both
the concept
3. Patterns
of presentation terms"
within
The
TWO.
and the
the text
21
29
"Technical
CHAPTER
of
12
painting of TheMystic Ark 4.
10
of a continuing
supposition
change in TheMystic Ark
33
of a continuing supposition change from the original painting of The Mystic Ark to the reportatio of The Mystic Ark 34
1. The
of a continuing supposition change from the first recension of The Mystic Ark
2. The
to the second 3. The
editing THREE.
CHAPTER
44
recension
of the second The nature
recension and original
of the text of TheMystic Ark 1. The
supposition was originally
Victor, whether
function
63
that the text of The Mystic Ark to intended as an appendix
TheMoral Ark 2. Whether
57
64
Ark was painted at Saint the question of ekphrasis, and to be The Mystic Ark was meant
The Mystic
painted by others
71
to be the text of The Mystic Ark was meant as a set of 78 understood instructions
3. How
vi
CHAPTER
Notes
FOUR.
Conclusions
83
87
Bibliography 109 Index Illustrations
CONTENTS
101
2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 13, 15, 16, 17, 20, 31, 32,40,41
Color Plates for Figures
thefront of the hook
1, 4, 5, 8, 9, i2, ?3 and 14 appear
in
PREFACE
Ark,
the center
I find
"First,
and there?the
point
point
on
having
I wish
the surface where been
fixed?I
to depict
a small
draw
square
the cen
tered on it in the likeness of that cubit inwhich the Ark was brought to source the most unusual With these words begins perhaps completion." we have for the history of medieval The Mystic art, Hugh of Saint Victor's two of the seeds serious miscon Ark. Seemingly enough, straightforward ceptions
the Ark
about
are inherent
in this opening
passage
and,
indeed,
throughout the text of TheMystic Ark. These are that Hugh himself was of the text of The Mystic Ark and that this text is an ac set of instructions for the production of the painting of
the actual writer tual step-by-step
TheMystic Ark. have been with us from the beginning These misconceptions of mod ern scholarship on the Ark. In trying to come to terms with them as part on the subject, of a larger study of mine it became that there apparent were
a number
have
appeared the last dozen tion between
of other, with
views equally misleading in interest the great increase
or so years. the painting
These
address
that, for the most
part, in The Mystic Ark over such essential issues as the rela
and the text of The Mystic
Ark;
the relation
be
tween the text of TheMystic Ark and TheMoral Ark (a related treatise by a second recension of The Mystic Ark was made; the signifi Hugh); why cance of the slight differences between the two recensions; the whether to serve as a substitute text is a work of ekphrasis; whether it was meant to produce for an image that was too difficult Ark was ever painted; whether it was Mystic so on. and others;
and preserve; whether The to be painted intended by
must to have a comprehensive be asked if we want questions text of and of The the understanding image Mystic Ark. But the body our current view to them, as they now stand, have distorted responses These
of of
to have a clear sense The Mystic Ark to such a degree that it is impossible source without of this important first reexamining the textual basis of these issues. This is not an easy task. Both the text and the image of the Ark
are so
approaching
that neither complex an effective manner
can be dealt with subject in the same work. Therefore,
in anything before tak
ing up the image of TheMystic Ark in its own right, something Iwill do in a later study,
the nature
of the Ark
as a written
text must
first be examined
PREFACE
Vlll
more better
carefully. understood
In doing Ark this, I believe that, as The Mystic and better known, itwill take its place alongside
becomes Bernard as one of
of Clairvaux's
and the writings of Suger of Saint-Denis Apologia we have for stripping away the clouded varnish of history to reveal ever more of the extraordinarily vibrant artistic culture of early an was more artistic culture that active? nowhere Europe, twelfth-century the best means
in utilizing the well-educated
both
wealthy
leading
its use?than among imagery and in cautioning against and intellectually members of the often sophisticated of the monastic
houses
and coll?gial
orders.
* *
*
a
I have incurred many debts in the course of long work, this study. On the basis of time alone, thanks must be made first writing to the John Simon Guggenheim in the for their assistance Foundation is just a part; the Foundation of which this book has a overall project, ever I cannot how the moral that but sense, believe, support fully know, it is not
Though
receive from them outweighs their generous financial also go to Kurt Forster, Herb and deeply felt thanks must and the much missed Robert Benson. John Williams, its fellows
Related
support. Kessler,
The digitally produced image, which will appear in a more detailed way inmy later study of the image of theArk> has been amajor project in itself. In my complete Leo Schouest, Millen,
I am grateful to Karen Genet, Madelyn dependence, and Ben Han, who was the first dig Sohail Wassif,
to the second artist, Claire Clement, ital artist of this project. My gratitude a person of unlimited the produc and talent, knows no bounds; generosity not have been possible without tion of the image of The Mystic Ark would her
skill and dedication.
any images
at all without
Emory Elliott, Director of California, Riverside, I am deeply Foundation.
Even
have been that there would so, it is unlikely and moral the generous financial support of, first, of the Center for Ideas and Society at the University of the Samuel H. Kress and, later, Lisa Ackerman indebted
to both
of these people
and institutions.
I am equally indebted toMichelle Brown, Max Neiman, and JohnWilliams (again) for their help along these lines. I also thankMieke Bahmer, who made
painting. Gratitude critical
reconstruction of The Mystic Ark that appears those who are new that goes a long way in helping as in the two-dimensional its structure expressed
the three-dimensional
in this study, an image to the Ark understand
must
reading
to Steven Ostrow be expressed and to Dan of the manuscript,
for his much-appreciated for his invaluable
Sheerin
ix
PREFACE
advice
on the translation
study. My
sincere
of The Mystic Ark, which will appear goes as well to Julia Bloomfield, appreciation
in my later Sara Chan,
Emerick,
Forster-Hahn, John Ganim, Fran?oise Stephen Gersh, a and Marina for wide of Smyth O'Boyle, variety help and sup port related to this project, and to Paul Binski and Christian Heck, among others already mentioned, for their support in general. Finally, very spe Judson
Cornelius
are owed to Mark for their thought Jordan and Glenn Olsen as press readers. ful readings and suggestions are advised to be aware of the distinction Readers between my use of cial thanks
"the Ark,"
by which
I mean
the
iconographical
component
of the Ark
proper in the image of TheMystic Ark, and "the Ark? a shortened title use when
I sometimes Mystic This
referring
to either
the
image
or
the text of The
Ark.
professor
book
is dedicated
of medieval
to the memory
history,
colleague,
of Robert and friend.
Benson,
1925-1996,
Introduction
in medieval
nowhere
Perhaps
in Hugh
than
converge
culture
do art, science,
of Saint Victor's
and theology better a work that was
The Mystic Ark, at a moment of previously
con unrivalled coincidentally, to art time threat The and of science troversy perceived by theology. was one of enormous in and political social, intellectual, change; change a which the emerging and often contentious schools of Europe played in the crucial areas of science and the systemati central role, particularly not
conceived,
over
zation of theology. TheMystic Ark is the name of both a painting made by Hugh for the school of Saint Victor and the text that describes it, the two created
being
sometime
from
1125 to early
1130.
It was
no accident
that
itwas from within this highly charged and itself radically changing world of the education of the intellectual elite that TheMystic Ark originated. Despite the vast body of writings left by Hugh, very little is known of life in general and even less of his early life in particular. But there is a to to construct make it basic outline of his life, a possible just enough can in which his work and thought be under context, however sketchy, in the late eleventh in stood. Hugh was born sometime century, probably
his
to have been educated there by the canons regu Saxony, and is believed a 1115 he entered the abbey of Saint Victor, lar of Hamersleben. Around house of canons regular, at that time just on the eastern edge of Left Bank Paris. By 1133, he had become master of the school there, chosen for this in size and office at a time when the schools were expanding dramatically importance.
The
school
of Saint Victor
was
among The house
while under his direction. particularly in involved the reform of the secular Church deeply
the most
renowned, was
of Saint Victor in northern
France,
was
in contemporary active himself intellectual Hugh politics as a a his teacher scholar. the his and time of death position By through were was in early 1141, his teaching and writings such that he considered
and
by many to be the leading theologian inWestern Europe during themid twelfth tory,
one of the great moments century, even called alter Augustinus, being
of European his intellectual a second Augustine, by his
contemporaries.1 and text of The Mystic Ark form one of the most for an understanding of medieval visual culture most context. The painting?the complex single work
the painting Together, sources we have unusual and
its polemical
2
CENTER POINT
art from
of figurai
the entire Middle
known
Ages?is
to have
served
as
the focal point of a series of brilliant and highly political lectures under taken by the great theologian Hugh at Saint Victor (Fig. 1). The equally text provides and a quarter
exceptional forty-one
a description pages
long
image that is no less than in the modern critical edition: the of this
longest description of a single actual work of figurai art from theMiddle Ages
proper
repeated
by around
production
pages. The forty-one of the image (although
text was meant it is not
to aid in the
an actual
step-by
Fig. 1. TheMystic Ark as itmight have appeared if constructed at the convent of Hohenbourg during the abbacy of Abbess Herrad in the late twelfth
century.
Digital
reconstruction,
Clement/Han/Rudolph.
3
INTRODUCTION
step set of instructions),
in a sense, being
each production,
an
"original."
art
But the importance of The Mystic Ark for the history of medieval as an advisor
to Abbot
the Ark itself. For Hugh acted beyond on his famous art at Saint-Denis.2 And, with or without program Suger on this the direct guidance of Hugh the systematization point, particular to the in The Mystic Ark seems to have served as the impetus of imagery extends
in the west portals of Saint-Denis, the first imagery first the constructed Gothic, portals fully systematized, (Fig. 3). an elaborate of The Mystic Ark presents The painting visual summary a of the entire history of salvation?in all of human his sense, religious systematization
of
in the beginning until the end of time, pointedly tory that matters?from with all of creation, association both spiritual and physical, and under on top of this universal divine dispensation. and fully Imposed history a complex with it is of schema individual salvation that is also integrated related
to the salvation
as a whole.
of humankind
More
the painting effects its meaning the depic specifically, through tion of Christ the with the six of creation cosmos, pro embracing days from his mouth. is composed The cosmos of the three cosmic ceeding zones
on figurai dependent 2 forms found of pedagogic schemata and 4). The (Figs. zone of ether is indicated the the of Twelve representations by Signs of the Zodiac and the Twelve Months, in two concentric arranged rings. of ether,
air, and earth,
is heavily
all of which
in the traditions
In the region
are
portrayed along with a rather as the earth?fully quaternary complete harmony. Through represented a mappa mundi, for Hugh's itself a major vehicle theoretical views on the Chosen from People are shown, first wandering history of salvation?the to the Promised and then off into Land, Egypt being dragged captivity in Babylon coterminous with the earth, (Fig. 5, no. 18, 19). Symbolically an image an image
of air, the Twelve Winds
of the Ark
of Noah
that ismeant
is the focus
tinct readings as the Ark of Noah, and
the Ark
as
to be understood
of Mother
of this complex composition, four exegetically dis holding
the Ark of the Church, the Ark of
Grace.
The
of component to it is that say except are as meant to be understood three stages that projecting toward the viewer rise up sionally (Figs. 4 and 6). Ladders men and women the Ark's four corners, up which sixty sixty
Wisdom, too
involved
to be described
the Lamb of God
here,
in the central cubit in which
the Ark
is far
composed three-dimen
of
from
each of
climb
toward
the Ark culminates,
to Genesis 6:16 (Fig. 5, no. 7-10, all this, hun 1). Throughout according dreds of figures, and the creation of symbols, inscriptions operate?from to the Last Judgment?typically at an astonishingly humankind high of coordination. degree
4
CENTER POINT
_? 1:Majesty 2:Throne 3: Seraphim 4:Choirs of Angels 5: SixDays 6:Zodiac 7:Months 8:Winds 9:QuaternaryHarmony 10:Earth/mappamundi 11:Ark 12:Evangelists' symbols
Fig. 2.
T/ie Mystic
-^S^at^t
Ark,
selected major
components.
Choirs of Angels: 4 Earth/mappamundi: 10 Evangelists' symbols: 12 Majesty: 1 Months: 7 Quaternary harmony: 9 Seraphim:3 SixDays: 5 Throne: 2 Winds: 8 Zodiac: 6
Clement/Rudolph.
5
INTRODUCTION
TTV
m
: ^ZS|i#l|?
Fig. 3.
1
Saint-Denis,
west
portals
(photo
Gueiroard).
a major statement Ark constitutes a one in that ad very specific way, phrased the contemporarily issues of creation, the dresses important systematic in and the of science the education of place ology, neoplatonism, society's intellectual of the painting was to present these issues elite.3 The purpose on
Fundamentally political, the history of salvation
The Mystic
in an integrated visual format that could serve as the focal point for ex tensive discussions of the issues. The purpose of the text was to enable
6
CENTER POINT
ThreeStages of theArk FirstStage |
Fig. 4.
Rudolph.
The Mystic
Ark.
Earth,
air, ether,
and
the three
Second Stage ThirdStage
stages. Clement/
7
INTRODUCTION
Central pillar
1: Central cubit (Thecenterpoint of the centralcubit is thecenter point of theentire composition) 2: Tree of Life 3: Book of Life
Line of generation
4: Line of generation proper to the flesh 4a: According to the spirit 4b: According The extended line of generation runs from the first through the sixth day of creation 5: Twelve Patriarchs 6: Twelve Apostles
Four Ascents Cold Heat Cold 10: Heat
of of of of
the East theWest the West the East
Other Selected 11: 12: 13: 14: 15: 16: 17: 18: 19:
Fig.
5.
The Mystic
Clement/Rudolph.
Ark.
Selected
components
Elements
Paradise / Limbus Patrum Adam micro/ macrocosm Forty-two stopping places Hebrews fleeing Egypt Exile to Babylon Lastludgment Hell Egypt Babylon_
of
the Ark
and
earth.
CENTER POINT
8
Ark proper The Mystic Ark. The two-dimensional Fig. 6. reconstruction three dimensions. Bahmer/Rudolph. Digital
scholars
outside
of Saint Victor
to undertake
similar
projected
discussions
into
them
to produce the image. necessary of number copies of The surviving manuscript large as some of the most to make it as popular popular Mystic most author the read of Bernard Clairvaux, widely arguably writings by a it seems that the text and image played of the time4), very active and selves
Given
by providing the unusually Ark (enough
novel
role
the
in the current
information
controversies
with
which
Hugh
was
concerned.
One
Chapter
THE TEXTOF THEMYSTICARK AS A REPORTATIO
In one of his fictive moral
close
the genuinely amoral and philosopher, "It is necessary that you pay wrote, of these things on Plato, not on blame the difficulty
statesman
Roman
to Lucilius,
attention?and
letters
Seneca,
could easily say the same thing about Hugh of Saint Victor with a so to to text difficult read and to understand The Mystic Ark, that regard seems to be the reason why it has previously been al its very difficulty most completely ignored by art historians.
me!"51
But
this would
can only spite what shared with modern how
to Hugh?or at least a little unfair. For, de as a horrific be described text, equal blame must be as scholars. scholars used to wonder Indeed, just
be unfair
such a disorderly such orderly
conceived
an orderly The Mystic
artworks,
as Hugh the written
thinker Ark,
The Mystic Ark. artworks Suger's
as Abbot
thinker
Suger of Saint-Denis so some of them still wonder
could
have
how
such
text as have produced such a disorderly of the expression orderly supremely image of In an earlier study, I showed how the order in some of was
could
to of Hugh's role as a principal advisor It can now also be shown that the disorderli
the result
on his art Suger program.6 ness of the text of The Mystic
Ark
to the fact that the text is not by the intellectual, visual, and oral im
is owed
per se but is a reportatio: while of The Mystic Ark are or were by Hugh, the main body of the text of ages was not actually written by Hugh himself, but by an anony The Mystic Ark mous re similar to lecture notes, although Hugh reporter as something mains its author, morally speaking. Hugh
failed to make this fundamental scholars have in observation, Having cases the difficulties of this tortuous writ many needlessly compounded to tortuous force the round pegs with explanations, equally ing hoping of the evidence into the square holes of their preconceived arguments. Twisting
and
turning
more
than
the serpentine
attribute
of a medieval
10
CENTER POINT
these arguments of Dialectic, have such potential for personification a it is confusion that them that causing only by addressing individually can text coherent view of this complex be presented and "the difficulty of these
to a minimum.
kept
things"
On the basis of both a passage in The Mystic Ark that refers to The as already written in The Moral and a number of references Ark that speak of the painting of The Mystic Ark as pr?existent, the tradi tional view has been simply that The Moral Ark was written first and that
Moral
Ark
The Mystic ark-schema composition the greater pr?existent
Ark was
then written
in order
to describe
of the the painting Ark. Although this order of scholars have ignored may be correct as far as it goes, most same references in of these The Moral Ark to the significance and the actual relation between the painting of The painting that
to in The Moral
is referred
Mystic Ark, the treatise of TheMoral Ark, and the text of TheMystic Ark, and none have seriously questioned why the text of TheMystic Ark should be so unlike
in its lack of clarity. other writings Hugh's at studies on Hugh and The Mystic times, contradictory of, canon to go further than Sicard, a regular, has attempted the origins of the painting before him in trying to articulate and
In a pair Ark, Patrice those
a to The Moral text of The Mystic Ark and their relation Ark.7 Despite two Sicard makes work, great deal of very useful and much-appreciated that fundamentally affect the vast majority basic errors of interpretation
of his extended analysis of the subject. The first is his lack of recognition that the text of The Mystic
is a reportatio.8
Ark
1. FIRST SUGGESTIONS OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO The
initial obstacle
in coming
to an understanding
of the nature
and func
tion of the text of TheMystic Ark immediately presents itself in the ab a statement statement its purpose, of any introductory it regarding no in the text begins abruptly needs. With very much preface whatsoever, a uneven in of and series voice the first person (the very Hugh) proceeds sence
of the painting of instructions for the production of seemingly practical now a sermon-like The Mystic Ark: now being very methodical, adopting an now slipping into laconic tone, toward the end irredeemably quality, in with and interest the undertaking, finally concluding losing seemingly on the function a very brief statement of the text that is something less than
illuminating. As discussed below,
it is filled with
the text
inconsistencies;
is on occasion it often
unclear
gets ahead
or even
of its own
confused;
description,
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO
11
that has not yet been introduced; for granted information and it a weak knowledge name only a few of of the Bible at times?to displays the problems that arise from this work. This is entirely out of keeping with a other writings, which Hugh's display high degree of clarity, consistency, taking
logic in the order of information eral enthusiasm for the subject
introduced,
biblical
and gen knowledge, a few isolated exceptions,
at hand.9 With
the only consistent stylistic element that the text of TheMystic Ark has in common with the body of Hugh's writings is the high level of its basic or ganization,
that something and that is at times
painting when the text moves any university Mystic Ark are
away professor will
stems
from the very nature of the directly in the written presentation severely strained from the structural As logic of the painting. confirm,
in character
fully the term "reportatio"
with
all of these student
traits of the text of The
of a complex lecture. cen before the thirteenth
notes
does not appear a in tury, the practice of reporter taking notes during an oral presentation a class situation is one found throughout the Middle As described Ages.10 a is not exactly class notes, but rather some by Beryl Smalley, reportatio While
into a fuller state, sometimes put into the thing like class notes worked first person, for the use of others. Though it may be recopied typically it and to without need be corrected and may again recomposition, again to have references to literature.11 all, it has no pretensions supplied. Above
Not only did Hugh actively participate in themaking of reportationes, but
the first detailed
In the Sententie the Ark
account
de divinitate a student
comes from his very lectures. of the practice 1127 (precisely of around the same time as named
later abbot ofWest perhaps a reporta in the minster, process of making experience an tio of a series of lectures by Hugh that presents early, oral form of a por tion of the first part of Hugh's De sacramentis.12 According to Laurence, lectures),
describes
Laurence,
his own
I brought my tablets [ofworked-up Hugh once a week so that, under
notes
of the lecture] back toMaster if there were anything cut it be out, anything overlooked might be added, superfluous might anything poorly phrased might be changed.13 his direction,
that was very simple and ulti so, he put the lectures into a language his own, like lecture notes today. The same can be said for another mately the writ lectures, the Descriptio reportatio of Hugh's mappe mundi, where also has a preface ing is again in a very simple style. This piece, however, Even
written in a literary style that is in such stark contrast to the body of the as to suggest that the two were written by different persons, with the in all probability In contrast, the irreg prologue being by Hugh himself.14 text of to the of the ascribed and known ularity writing traditionally Hugh
work
12
CENTER POINT
as De
that itwas
a reportatio that was assem revised or even reviewed having
has suggested contemplatione bled by a student reporter without while
it.15 Thus,
all of these writings
Hugh are reportationes
of Hugh's
lectures,
the degree to which Hugh participated in them varied: in the first, Hugh as a moder for the sake of this study, might be described one that was limited to ate level of participation in the reportatio process, was in the second, he to the point of at least some involved emendation; followed
what,
in the third, he seems to have had no input all.16 composition; was In The Mystic Ark, it seems that Hugh's participation something else again, being less than the moderate level of participation described
actual
but more than that of the apparently by Laurence dent reportatio of De contemplatione.
completely
indepen
2. THE OCCASIONAL LACKOF UNDERSTANDING OF THE REPORTER OF BOTH THE CONCEPT AND THE PAINTING OF THEMYSTIC ARK While most point Mystic are
the evidence
of this particular process manifests reportatio a clearly in general reading of the entire body of the writing, out a few of the more pronounced indications of the origins Ark
as a reportatio without
detailing
every
single
occurrence,
itself let me of The which
many.
Perhaps the most obvious specific evidence that The Mystic Ark is a so consistent lies in a lack of clarity and even a confusion that it reportatio an that the text was directly written is all but impossible author by Hugh, of Clairvaux?never who?like Bernard lets his eye drift from the tar as an absence of true un these slips manifest themselves get.17 Sometimes structure of the fundamental the of The Mystic Ark. of derstanding logic For example, of the construction the description of the cen following
tral cubit with which TheMystic Ark begins, the Ark proper is taken up the text mentions 2, no. 11). Here, (using the present to is that that become the first stage "ought" the rectangle tive) to the biblical dimensions, according length six times its width, (Fig.
mediately have
able form": with
which
but
im
goes on to state (using the perfect indicative) that "Imyself
shortened
modification
subjunc to have a
the length is to decrease
to around
four
times."18
the size of the Ark
The
"because
of this purpose of its more suit
so that, rather than have an extreme oblong shape, the world or more is tradition the Ark is less coterminous?and which
have to be only oval, properly ally circular?would speaking (Fig. 7). This that determines is a reduction every other aspect of the size of the painting to alter not just divine proportions and that, in its willingness but the
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO
13
u o in x o o CO
? OhnU O ^
^ X)
'S o
oU <^^
3, . ?O S
o
S s, Oh
<s>
V)
?-m
?
tu?
.S O<->
14
CENTER POINT
divine
proportions the authority
from
ther on, however,
of the basic not of Hugh, in the discussion
can come of the painting, a student reporter. A few sentences
structure
of the construction
only fur
of the second
and
now and oblivi indicative (in the present stages, the reporter notes ous to any change), two more "I construct similarly having rectangles six their of the new stages as identical to times width," conceiving lengths third
the traditional had
of six to one
and very well-known biblical proportions the reporter because altered.19 Whether
just been
that
had been working
from TheMoral Ark (which is concerned only with a discussion of bibli not
cal proportions,
the practical
details
of the image)
or from
the original
image itself (which carried an inscription describing the length of the Ark as 300 cubits, the length given in the Bible), this oversight betrays amind reverting
unwittingly ing Hugh's
to the Ark
of Genesis
original
fundamentally
rather
conception,
than fully understand like so much which,
of
Hugh's thought, is founded equally in the ideal and the practical.20 The reporter is equally unclear the relation of the structure of regarding con of its message, The Mystic Ark to the content something completely trary to the very essence of the Ark. This is true for all aspects of The Mys to the critical ascents that so of the painting define the nature of the structure of the Ark proper. On the one hand, the in that the central cubit is also to be understood reporter never specifies ticArk,
from
the crucial
center
the fact that the wanderings of Jerusalem, of part as the location despite the and the Chosen People temporal-spatial logic of the line of genera of the of The Mystic Ark? tion?both components conception important no. this On the other hand, he is 14, 4).21 rely upon understanding (Fig. 5, in articulating the logic of the or vague almost to the point of indifference of the four ascents that radiate around the central cu der of progression bit?a integrated temporally, spatially, and spiritually logic that is deeply in passing into the structure of The Mystic Ark?noting that the Heat of is "the
the East parting," dependent
last corner
for those returning and the first for those de to the necessarily later that much inter this refers revealing only from humankind's fall and salvation of humankind: departure
and return to God being the essential theme of TheMystic Ark (Fig. 8).22 The
same
indifference,
in this case
to a proper
Ark's The Mystic incredibly painstakingly related logic, is the basis of the almost total
written
of explanation system of inter
thought-out lack of indication
of where
the
only seemingly irregular (and then just slightly) set of inscriptions be longs?this
set being made
up of three
triads
rather
than
the four
triads
that is standard in theArk (headed by The Married, Those Making Use of the World, suggests
That Things to Hugh.23 its importance and The
Creep)?a
set whose
very
irregularity
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO 15
Cold of the East Swolen
Blindness
Heat of the East
Pride
Spiritual
of of
Ignorance
Heat
Cold of the West
Fervor
Concupiescenc? the Flesh of the West Convenience
Ascent
Descent
Fig. 8.
of verbai
presentation 1: Cold of the East
1:Heat
of the East
1: Cold
of the East
2: Cold
of the East
2: Heat
of the West
2: Cold
of the West
3: Heat
of the West
3: Cold
of the West
3: Heat
of theWest
4: Cold
of theWest
4: Heat
of the East
4: Heat
of the East
The Mystic
Ark. The four ascents. Clement/Rudolph.
16
CENTER POINT
in his presentation of the quaternary that plays such a harmony nature of and delicate role in relating the basic soteriological significant And
The Mystic
Ark
to the current
controversy
over advanced
confuses the tightly interconnecting porter hopelessly to the individual: relate the time and space of the cosmos
the re learning, elements that cor first associating
Spring with the East (the top of the painting) and then, two paragraphs Summer with the same top (Fig. 2, no. 9; Fig. 9). This later, associating error apparently came about the reporter's consultation of a through schema from a literary source for this particular (which had component
Fig. 9.
The Mystic
Ark. Quaternary
harmony.
Clement/Rudolph.
1:East/Childhood/Air/Spring 2: South/Adolescence/Fire/Summer 3:West/Middle age/Earth/Autumn 4: North/Old age/Water/Winter
17
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO
a strong literary tradition)?such in Isidore chapter on the four elements such
as
the
schema
of Seville's
De
the illustrating rerum? natura
of the painting itself as the text was 9 have done be for This he would and 10, written (cf. Figs. example).24 cause of his relative unfamiliarity with this seemingly but actu complex rather
than from
observation
direct
and be "scientific" component, ally quite simple and entirely traditional cause he knew that the schema of Isidore (among other possibilities) and was same to He oblivious the the The Mystic Ark replicated fact, concept. common or inexperience, this indifference that whether very through to agree with The that had to be made schema has a variable orientation Ark's
Mystic ponent
Fig.
10.
own
four cardinal
of the Ark. Not
only
Isidore of Seville, De Natura harmony. de France, Ms. lat. 5543:136.
Macro/microcosmic
Biblioth?que
nationale
are an important com which directions, an error indicative of an individual
is such
Rerum.
18
who
CENTER POINT
was
not very
advanced,
but
it is also
suggestive
of one who
was,
at
themost basic level, not in harmony with the logic of TheMystic Ark. The to the library to work up the details of the writ itself of turning practice as described ten text, however, is exactly that of the reportatio process by reason so the for here would have particular although doing Smalley, to mention for virtually scholar?not unnecessary any experienced effected. that the act was quite clumsily from this lack of connection with the logic of the structure of Distinct carelessness the text of description The Mystic Ark, a general pervades been
is completely clar foreign to those writings by Hugh himself, whose as one to him and have caused be described of ity, precision, organization one in For example, the first of the scholastics. the reporter calls passage, that
a triad of ladders) ascents (each ascent all-important comprising same same at the time using the for the individual word lad scalae, while the
ders
that make
up the ascents, but for the ascents?an
then
later switching muddled impossibly
to two distinctly
terms different of presentation of the concepts The Mystic Ark.25 He calls the personifications associated even in the text it elsewhere with these four ascents "Virtues," though of only one of the ascents are stated that the personifications is explicitly to be considered the rest being grouped virtues, systematically by ascent more as "emotions," this and method of "works," analytical "thoughts"; of Hugh.26 He says that is typical of the thought are at to the of the Ark, be depicted four corners Evangelists not the Evangelists but their symbols?the goes on to describe or Four Living Creatures?a lack of precision that reveals an categorization
the Four and
then
animalia
imprecise himself would have made when that Hugh hardly a no. a context in school the 12).27 Despite subject (Fig. 2, presenting for symbolic either a divi purposes pattern of noting clearly established
mind,
and
a mistake
sion or a lack of division
of the ascents and ladders, the of the inscriptions of attention that reveals a of these, a wandering
one reporter overlooks to how these important function within lack of sensitivity inscriptions would the very author of these inscriptions the schema, not something are inscriptions to indicate what be likely to do.28 He often neglects within with that
are not, a the painting and what failing that is at cross-purposes reason for existence of the text.29 He forgets to specify the the very some imagery, is to be figurai?appar such as the Twelve Months,
visual basic to the actual author of tendency ently lacking the essential as The Mystic Ark (Fig. 2, no. 7).30 His visual creation such a supremely to history is low?something that could never be said of level of attention before The reporter mentions the Babylonian himself. Captivity Hugh the liberation
from Egypt,
a small point
but
a
telling
one
that,
in its ahis
19
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO
torical attitude, is contrary to the deeply historical outlook of both Hugh in a passage devoted and The Mystic Ark (Fig. 5, no. 15, 14).31 Likewise, to the six ages of the history of salvation, the reporter never describes as in with the rest of the image, these ages any way coordinated being that they were suggests though the context of the passage (Fig. II).32 He one at order of exegetical confuses the traditional levels, point giving the as and of and sequence history, allegory, tropology history, tropology, to that in its blatant inattention the spiritual ascent allegory, something in the different
inherent with
which
ceivable
coming than Bonaventure
of exegetical understanding?a is intimately concerned?is absolutely
Ark
The Mystic
as
levels
from Hugh, directly said, after identifying
less a personage individual Fathers with
about whom certain
subject incon
no
at all levels of exegetical that only he excelled interpretation, from the point of view of the basic function of them.33 Even worse of the a description text of The Mystic Ark, which is to provide for constructing comes in the highly detailed account of vari the image, this misordering the various
ous
ladders
of the ascents?a
real impediment for successful completion in his point of reference, nor the reporter wavers
and use of the Ark. And
mally describing the painting from the point of view of looking out from the image (where the term "right" means stage right, or the left as viewed), one more than it both from this point of view and but in place describing
from that of looking directly toward it (where the term "right"means the indicates the absence of right, or stage left).34 This inconsistency a firm grasp of the importance of the essential relation of the image to the as the conceives viewer. The first point of view, which of the painting from which is abandoned for emanates, subject knowledge indifferently viewer's
as the the point of subject of description: into view of the actual author, Hugh, becomes transformed unwittingly mere the point of view of the the reporter. writer, a is who scholar advocated the very careful use of color as a Hugh the second,
which
aid?a
memory
sees it simply
practice
in which
the slightest mistake renders the device in The Mystic is a very significant element an has lax attitude toward color indeed. extremely color
counterproductive?and Ark.35 Yet the reporter in his discussion For example, tions
the use of color
discusses
these
of the planks of the three periods, he men he takes up the logic of the planks but them; he then gives a actually specifying
even before
colors without
of the significance of the colors, even though partial interpretation they still have not been specified (Fig. 11). He finally gives the colors after sev eral pages of general discussion of the composition and significance of on in is the planks, whose the expression painting strongly dependent the use of these colors, but then immediately relates one of conceptually
20
CENTER POINT
Three Periods Natural
Law
E3 Written D Grace
Law
H
Three Types of People (plank system) Of nature: green (the Earth is also green) Of the law: yellow Of grace: purple (the third stage is also purple)
Six Ages 1: Adam
up to the Flood
2: The Flood up to Abraham 3: Abraham 4: David
up to David
up to the Captivity
5: The Captivity up to the coming of Christ 6: The coming of Christ until the end of all time
Fig.
11.
The Mystic Ark. Time-related
Clement/Rudolph.
components
of the Ark.
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO 21
manner to the same color else (green) in the vaguest possible in the schema this where (in the mappa mundi; Fig. 2, no. 10), although use not for of will be mentioned and the many, many pages component the reporter notes color within it is never taken up at all.36 Elsewhere, the colors
how each step on the outside of the ladders of the Cold of the East and the Cold of theWest (every one of which is inscribed with the title of one of the thirty books of Scripture) is divided into three sections to in dicate
the book's
potential
for interpretation
according
of exegetical thought, indicating only much to be achieved
levels
is
the use of symbolic colors.37 through a is the display of weak knowledge of the
compositionally: out of character
Even more
to the three
later how this division
Bible. One of the distinguishing features of the line of generation is the series
of "icons"
of the sons of Jacob, the Patriarchs "as if a kind of senate of the City
of the twelve
tribes
(Fig. 5, no. was a very pop of these men, born of different women, 5). The maternity in the Middle ular historical and exegetical subject Ages. And yet the re the mothers who were servingwomen, Bilhah porter confuses describing of Israel,
arranged
as the servant when,
it was
that a person would ture, second to none thor.38 And easily
as the servant of Rachel, Zilpah identifying reverse. This is the the sort of mistake just hardly of Scrip be likely to make who was "in knowledge one au to in the world," according twelfth-century
of Leah
in fact,
yet,
of God"
and
it is an error
into which
a student
reporter
might
quite
fall.
3. PATTERNS OF PRESENTATIONWITHIN THE TEXT text even if it had been recorded by a Ark would be a complex But itwas not. Close analysis reveals and clear individual. very disciplined sections faint traces of three successive, unintentionally slightly different were of text, sections that the result of three successive, slightly different The Mystic
approaches occasional
as the work progressed. to the reportatio process inconsistencies within inconsistencies these sections,
themselves
sometimes
significant
in understanding
There
are
that are
the reportatio
origin
of TheMystic Ark. The
first
in amore the theme the text. passage
of these unintentionally fashion from
or less even
sections slightly different the beginning of The Mystic
continues Ark until
of the four ascents
is taken up, approximately half-way through a very strong pattern of presenting first a by for the production in the of the Ark proper written
It is characterized of directions
first-person
singular,
"I," followed
by
a discussion
of its meaning
(or of
22
CENTER POINT
a particular aspect of the structure in the context of the entire construction) over and over alternation then repeated
how
from
the discussion
cosmos.
Here,
of
the four
ascents
speaking,
generally
of the Ark
is to be understood
in the third person, with section again. The second to the
up
of the
introduction
the presentation
changes
this runs
to one
of
directions in the third person (as opposed to first), followed, as before, by third-person introduction
In the third section, of meaning. from the to the end of the text, the use of first-person
interpretations of the cosmos
ex the third-person directions, displacing generally in the plural "we," appears cept that now the first person consistently as opposed to the earlier, more immediate "I." More signifi singular cease to for of formal all appear, interpretation practical cantly, passages
directions
returns,
purposes.39 Let me characterize
these
sections
a little further
to give a better under which the text of The
of the changing reportatio process with standing was Ark created. The first section begins with Mystic
a very clear and de of the central cubit, followed
in the first-person singular in the third person: its this was clearly work interpretation by thorough seen in relation to the rest of that had been carefully gone over and, when the text of The Mystic Ark, itwas clearly work that had been gone over by to one degree or another.40 The pairing of a first-person direction Hugh a a one is natural here. The ac passage with interpretation third-person tailed discussion
is not part of the of the Ark proper of the production as of will The be discussed and Ark, below, ceptual Mystic logic not have been part of the lectures; and so the reporter would would have had any rough notes on this aspect of the painting of The Mystic from the lecture. This first section of the lays out the basic structure tual process
and
involves,
without concept
of
To
it
not Ark Ark
someone
fairly complex geometry.41 not with the and connected facility truly intellectually re I have shown the in any profound way (as already it seems that actually working up the reportatio from the ex at least in regard to the of The Mystic Ark was not possible,
of Ark.
the basic
It thus seems
construction
of as a private
thought the reporter writing person
some
so
any visual of the Ark
porter to be) tant painting structure
at times,
con
that Hugh personally went with the reporter, something
lecture
everything here, whether
singular or an actual
of sorts, not down,
word
as a session for word.
a rhetorical
simply of this exchange,
over
the process that should be
of dictation
with
The use of the first
as described by a marks presentation by but not part of the original device
Smalley vestige that was part of the reportatio process Hugh that come lectures of The Mystic Ark. The interpretation passages common written the most the direction follow passages generally
after form
23
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO
a form that in exegetical the third person, discussions, typi Hugh uses own to assume he used in it his and would be natural cally exegesis, of of his lectures. The vast majority this form in the oral presentation a to have that ties them these interpretation passages typically specificity
used
in the body of Hugh's writings, the image of the Ark, have no counterpart on are in all likelihood based the reporter's and original notes from the between direction and lectures. The alternation passages first-person third-person the reporter, The next
ignored.42 that either Hugh tences that come hicle was slip by.
read perfectly
undoubtedly
today. and of direction
pair same as the first, except tion of the proportions then
passages
interpretation as it does just
How
such a thing
passage is first above
come
have
the
that the reduc
of the Ark mentioned
could
is much
passages
interpretation that it is in this direction
to
well
about?
noted
and
It is unlikely in the few sen
or the reporter forgot about this change the two references. Rather, it seems
that the ve
between
a reportatio It seems that,
draft, Hugh noted first of these two
to that unwittingly allowed such mistakes process in the editing process of the no longer extant rough at the in proportions (apparently orally) the reduction
references?an
alteration
that
have
could
only to harmonize
from him?and
come
that the reporter then neglected the follow a as text text he should have done, that would have agreed perfectly ing in its dutiful well before of this revision the well-known pro recording portions himself
of Genesis.43 apparently
Thus, Hugh's never reviewed
so never
new caught the tice of the reporter.
error
revision
was
the revised
that sprang
up
duly accepted, but Hugh text for thoroughness, and through
the careless
prac
seems to account for the passage that details process to specify how this the six ages of the history of salvation but then neglects in the painting the first section's pat subject appears (Fig. 11). Breaking tern of a first-person in the its direction followed passage interpretation by The
same flawed
on the six ages appears as a third incongruously a direction nor an in the interpretation?right as a middle of a long first-person direction. Easily overlooked meaningless us it is such hidden clues that inform of the work inconsistency, precisely on the six ages, passage ing process of the reporter. For the third-person third person, the passage narrative?neither person
in the first person those passages that precede and follow it, is taken it ratione, Bede in turn having adapted directly from Bede's De temporum at from Augustine.44 Medieval and other schemata times maps incorpo rated substantial textual passages, and there would in be nothing unusual unlike
inserting complete
passages absence
from Bede
into the painting to these of any directions
of The Mystic passages
Ark. But
implies
that
the they
24
CENTER POINT
were
as an
inserted
and perhaps
afterthought
from
a written
text
rather
than from the painting itself, very possibly after Hugh had pointed out that the subject
had been
in the mass
overlooked
of images
and
inscrip
tions that occupy theArk, especially the general area of the first half of the in a non-interpreta line of generation proper. This use of the third person tion passage that seems not to have been part of the rough draft suggests, that the only other third-person it does not confirm, non-inter though in the first section is also an addition whose passage pretation original ab sence may have been noticed in a cursory review of the rough by Hugh a on this direction the beams that become the basis of draft, passage being a passage in the that, this time, comes disconcertingly a very long third-person of interpretation (again) passage.45 seems come to in the first section have about in a Another anomaly
the four
ascents,
middle
similar way. While now with uneven,
concept In fact, Mystic
a moderate
on the uneven
dependent out from
of The Mystic Ark can be very presentation amount of discussion and now less, as if
the written
notes
lecture
of the reporter, one subject stands it is articulated: the length to which
text for the great of the periods of natural law, the written the entire
is so distinct
the discussion Ark
as the original
that Sicard
presentation
by Hugh
law, and grace (Fig. 11). sees its appearance in The of a new
of his thought.46 But for a prolific author like Hugh
development
to publish such a
as an original in a text of this genre discourse presentation developed with its otherwise minimal discussions and generally careless work would inconsistent with both the evidence and be completely of Hugh's practice The reason for its pres than a little unlikely. the genre itself, and so more ence
in The Mystic
Ark
seems
to lie elsewhere.
is composed subject of the three periods of the history of salvation in the first section, the subject be of three distinct passages. As is normal The
a first-person is perfectly which direction (the first passage), to in the periods the colors used clear, except that it refers distinguishing are in the third them. These colors without actually specifying given only a is third-person pas passage, which, interpretation enough, significantly gins with
a somewhat It is, however, sage agreeing with the usual pattern. passage and one that strangely repeats some of the information in the intervening
passage,
interpretation third-person Ark, this intervening Mystic tion far greater than what the painting, understanding whatsoever.
In fact,
the error-free
second
confused
presented is also a passage, which with other parts of The
passage.47 Compared of explana second passage has an amount is sufficient for the norm of the text implies no mention it of the colors makes although
the overall
discussion
of the three periods
would
be
exactly what would be expected if ithad been limited to the first and third
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO 25
alone?a
passages
standard
direction
followed by third that they are so unclear. law, the written law, and
first-person
person
interpretation?the being only problem of of should this the natural periods Why subject from the rest of the text? grace have been treated so differently to De sacramentis, written In the preface shortly after The Mystic Hugh
Ark,
wrote,
I have book
to write by the desires of certain people of the Christian faith. I have incorporated
been compelled on the sacraments
this into
it a number
of pieces that I had randomly written (dictassem) previ even to recompose it seemed laborious, ously superfluous, If it happens that my plain words have been unable these same points. because
a semblance
to observe it very
important
of the art of writing in these, I have not thought in the same truth. since they are [all] grounded I had written does concern me: that, when these
This, however, same pieces without of a future work
sufficient
at the time?I
attention
earlier?having made indiscriminately
for copying, having thought itwas enough to become But later, when known. notes,
no
them available
for these short pieces, I was incorporating
reason demanded the body of this work, that certain or that certain things be added them be changed, removed_48 into
From
this, we
that Hugh was willing later ones and that he had been
of his
into
others.49 We
learn
also know
that the reporter
was
intention
to incorporate out handing himself
willing
even them
things
in
earlier works to
these works to incorpo
rate other writings into TheMystic Ark, having copied directly both from in the second section shows.50 Ark, as a passage was never explicitly of three the devel however, periods, Hugh's theory oped in The Moral Ark, and the reporter could not turn to it for the error that he was clearly having trouble second passage. Given free intervening Bede
and from The Moral
it seems that this intervening has this subject, passage, which describing an "insertion" as into Sicard the been figuratively described by virtually an not in text,51 is literally just that, though actually original development seems a ves in it that it all the sense that he means. is likelihood Rather, of one of those "short pieces or tige, partially adapted by the reporter, even notes" that Hugh had been accumulating, that he handed out, and even a remnant into longer works?perhaps that he eventually integrated to which of his lost letter to Bernard of Clairvaux, Bernard responded
with his De baptismo of 1127 to 1128, apologizing for its lateness.52 Indeed, the component periods
per
of color se but
from
comes its visual
on the from Hugh's thought in the painting: there expression
not
three is no
26
CENTER POINT
reference
to color
second
passage's
exact
outside
in the intervening came from language
the second passage because the Ark lectures, originally to the painting of The Mystic Ark.
reference having been made without of the type of writ This intervening second passage, then, is an example was ing mentioned by Hugh, which given by him to help the reporter over a and artless its about the integration rough spot, by the reporter brought to the color scheme from its of the original reference separation so the result of a reportatio process that many pages later, specification did not place a high value on consistency. awkward
The
of
second
the
informal,
new,
runs
sections
up to, but not construction
of the four ascents
discussion
unintentional
from
the No
the cosmos.53 including, a of is part this section,
nor
geometrically demanding as was the case in are there any difficult concepts, historical-theological seems to have had to coach the reporter the first section, where Hugh
enough ture notes
to provide
and
personally
in its own
reporter
complex clarifying written material. Though to his own lec this is a section in which reference
right, and to the painting directly for the most part. This would of
pattern
straightforward with third-person
seems
to have
for the enough for the section's generally
account
direction
third-person
Indeed,
passages.
been
passages alternating in this section?which
interpretation use of the first signs of revision by Hugh himself?the in any consistent "I" ceases to appear and mis fashion, person singular no to proliferate, takes begin the latter apparently because Hugh was the rough draft. At the same time, the use of the reading longer closely authorial plural "we" is found from time to time, but in a first-person shows
no obvious
manner
haphazard generally part of Hugh. Even other
no direct
that suggests
still occasionally feels so, the reporter than his own lecture notes and his own
on
intervention
the need uneven
the
for an authority ability at reading
at times being the painting, The most explicit example of going
forth
from
the
passage, pretation whose language, Quatuor omnem sideramus
modis
quid
iudicia
reporter
quid
sit...
quomodo sua....
borrows
directly
. . . Primus modus
eximus.
creaturam
consideramus plenda
to turn to extant writings of Hugh. compelled in the passage on the four ways of this occurs in an inter the doorway of the central pillar. Here,
sit ex se_Secundus
ex dono
utatur Quartus
creatoris....
Deus modus
from
Ark,
consideramus est, quando modus est, quando con Tertius
ministerio ...
The Moral
est,
modus
est,
creaturarum quando
...
homo...
quando
ad im .54
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO
is copied
almost word
in The Mystic
for word
27
Ark:
om est, quando consideramus est quando considera quid sit ex se. Secundus modus mus omnem creaturam quid sit ex beneficio est creatoris. Tertius modus utatur Deus ministerio creaturarum ad quomodo quando consideramus Quatuor modis nem creaturam
eximus.
iudicia
implenda
Primus modus
sua. Quartus
modus
at the end of this passage,
Indeed,
... homo...
est quando
the reporter
refers
openly
,55 to
the reader
TheMoral Ark, towhich he himself had just turned. covers the last part third of the unintentionally different sections and the Majesty.56 abbreviated of The Mystic Ark: the cosmos Extremely in tone?as if the reporter came to realize that he had taken on a bigger or reason to be for another perhaps job than he had initially expected The
taken
up
later?this
rection
passages; those previously an exception ing
section
consists
almost
of third-person di at all in the sense of
entirely
there are no
passages interpretation in the text. The only passages in any way approach are a short introduction to this section and a conclusion
found
to thewhole of TheMystic Ark, both of which are in the first-person plu ral. Despite of these two passages, which will be discussed the importance soon, they are too terse to give any proof either way of having been di by Hugh.57 rectly written Ark Mystic the seasonal reference natura
there
of the reportatio nature of The over the confusion already mentioned of the quaternary caused by careless harmony
is significant in this section. I have
Nevertheless,
component to a differently oriented rerum and the impossibility
evidence
image from of ascribing
a text such as Isidore's
De
this inexcusable
fumbling even more in its own way, equally revealing and perhaps that The Mystic Ark was written by a reporter?striking striking as evidence a passage to no less in its immediate, that amounts personal quality?is
to Hugh.
than One
But,
on
a personal comment made by the reporter more of Hugh's original historical/theological
a developed east-west temporal-spatial progression a of salvation, human of the history theory history,
the painting theories was
itself. that of
of the focal point of that was rather fully
articulated in TheMoral Ark.58According to this theory, at the beginning of human history, what might be called the focal point of human activity as the extreme east on many medieval appeared no. of Eden mundi: the Garden 11). The focal point mappae (Fig. 5, soon after, to this with the great Meso shifted west theory, according the Chaldaeans, and the Medes. Mov empires of the Assyrians, potamian
was what
would
ing further west
have
with
the civilization
of Classical
Greece
and
the empire
28
CENTER POINT
of Alexander, mate
and further
westernmost
Rome
at "the
extension
the advent
with
the Roman
still with
of the centers
end
of
it reached its ulti Empire, the earth" after the fall of
of power
and
of Western
learning
Christendom. This theory is described in TheMystic Ark in the discussion of the earth as one of the three components
of the cosmos:
A map of the world in this area [i.e., the area of an ellipse, is depicted overlaid by the Ark; cf. Fig. 5] in such a way that the top of the Ark is toward the east and its bottom touches the west to the effect directed that?in
its extraordinary the sites extends downward the same beginning, of time.59
Far from
arrangement?the in sequence with
is the same as the end
and the end of the world
this dimensional
taking
geographical layout of the events of time from
of the history
phenomenon
of salva
tion a step further asHugh does in TheMoral Ark by relating the length, and height of the Ark to the exegetical of history, alle categories The the reporter of Ark completely gory, and tropology, Mystic ignores such an exegetical this aspect?though attitude is a constant undercur
width,
rent
of The Mystic
Ark?and
even
the basic historical theory "its rather poorly. Indeed, (mirabili disposi extraordinary arrangement" on the ingenuity of the painting's tione) is a comment ability to express on the theory not It is itself. reaction the of an Hugh's theory, passive explains
an experienced to the painting, not the active exposition in by It is as if the intellectually of one of his own original theories. at the painting, back, reporter were unaccomplished standing looking to praise the subject at hand; and felt that it was enough it is inconceiv observer
tellectual
able
that
That
this was
such
a statement
should
done
have
direct
visual
been
made
observation
himself. by Hugh is confirmed by the the de regarding
through directions specific and entirely unnecessary of and of the figures the Winds the of the Zodiac arrangement piction and Months, that could only be site-specific (Fig. 2, no. 8, 6, something extremely
7).60 In the end, whether
Hugh, the lending
in the form
shows
no evidence
of personal material.
revision,
of unpublished so it seems that these
And tions
this last section
of
proaches The first
text were
the
to the reportatio section?whose
three unintentionally result of three successive, process
of any close oversight personal
slightly
instruction, different
by or
sec
ap slightly different of the reporter progressed. structure of the geometric of the
as the work
component
Ark was crucial to the painting of TheMystic Ark, but which by its very
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO 29
nature
had not
lecture series and so for which part of the original no of it have taken notes?shows evidence that much
been
the reporter could based on a private
was
structure.
There
own, more this section, ary sources
to the reporter to explain this some of his gave the reporter
talk given by Hugh is also evidence that Hugh
extensive
notes
on at least one other
in subject that appeared liter resorted to related outside
and that the reporter readily text. In the second
to fill out his
section,
which
contains
no
or difficult for which the concepts seems to to the have reporter reporter Hugh, more on on his own lecture to direct reference the depended painting, on to and continued reference outside notes, texts, in this case Hugh's to make direct visual reference to The Moral Ark. The reporter continued demanding
geometric have might
constructions
had
to turn
sources in the third section, and to refer to outside written the painting absence of this section is distinguished complete by the virtually although because the of the task had passages, interpretation perhaps magnitude to make begun up further on.
itself felt or perhaps
for another
reason, which
Iwill
take
4. "TECHNICAL TERMS" the objection Finally, that "Hugh's diction
has been made
Evans, scholar, Michael by another as is and that words such odd," throughout plani fies, cingulus, zona, limbus, and cornu are not "the idiom of the practicing artist. Hugh was not artist."61 No, they are not the idiom of the practicing a practicing artist, and, so it seems, far less was the reporter; and so there is no reason at all to expect the language of the reportatio of The Mystic
to be that of a practicing artist. What Hugh was, was a master of the And what the reporter was, was a practicing student. As such, at times, employs if awkwardly The Mystic Ark understandably, the lan was so to of the schools that familiar them both. guage
Ark
schools.
Thus,
when
the first
Ark mentioned
Mystic of a private
of the unintentionally sections different of The one that seems to have been the result
above?the
on the geometric structure of sorts given by Hugh of of the reporter?opens I the Ark for the benefit find the with, "First, center point on the surface (planitie) where Iwish to depict the Ark...," is used by the reporter the word planities either because that was how lecture
of finding the center point during process con that was how the reporter himself to ceived the clearest of the geometric described process explanation a common term him by Hugh: planities in used both being geometrical in any course on geometry Practica geometriae and, presumably, Hugh's the geometric Hugh described the private lecture or because
30
CENTER POINT
the
reporter the Indeed,
may term
have
from Master
taken
at Saint
Hugh sense
Victor.62
in the geometric in the of "surface" on text Dream the Macro Commentary widely of Scipio by was referred to repeatedly in Hugh's Practica bius (Macrobius geome to by in is this also found who referred Vitruvius, triae), usage being at in his Didascalicon, the latter being a guide to study for students Hugh Saint Victor.63 read
is defined
school
and zona?which Cingulus "odd" feels "derive planities man's
outfitter"?likewise on the Dream
Commentary
the
same
author
who
the use
found
of
as a group from the of the gentle vocabulary either come or could come right out of the same way that Macrobius of Scipio.64 In the
begins his discussion of the different climatic divisions of the world em (which I translate as "belt") and later switches cingulus the reporter follows using both words interchangeably, in his discussion of the great bands that extend across
the word
ploying to zona
("band"), the same pattern the entire length and breadth
nous with
of the Ark, which
the earth on all four
is itself virtually of these bands
cotermi
as essen sides, conceiving in scope (reflecting the thought of Hugh), however awkward seem to a modern reader.65 And may just as the zonae of as and other classical writers (such Virgil, Ovid, and Pliny) dis zones of the world?the climatic the different frigid, temperate,
tially cosmic the language Macrobius tinguish
and torrid?the zonae of TheMystic Ark distinguish the Heat of the East from the Cold of the East, the Heat of theWest from the Cold of the how
so on.66 A glance the colored horizontal
have
been
West,
at aMacrobian
and
zonal map makes very plain bands of a map like this could
and diagonal to the col of the reporter (or Hugh) bands of The Mystic Ark (Fig. 12).67
in the mind
transposed ored horizontal and vertical
is a word that Honorius likewise, Augustodunensis to use in his Imago Mundi?another text addressed hesitate inmuch describe the "border" or limits of the world culture?to Limbus,
way
that
the reporter
uses
it to describe
the border
does
not
to school the same
of the central
cubit
(Fig. 13).68 As to the use o?cornu to mean "corner" (seven occurrences), it is enough cornu is a to say that although word for the corner, acceptable perfectly more common term for this meaning in The Mystic Ark is angulus (sixteen in The Moral Ark, where the same term employed occurrences), by Hugh cornu
is never
in that work
is unequivocally written The Moral is "standard." himself, Ark, the terminology by Hugh a bit more It is only in the reportatio that the language becomes perhaps as a demonstration of newly acquired Latin skills on the arcane, whether the word
part of the reporter
used.69
or because
Thus,
of the common
usage
that
o? cornu
in reference
THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK AS A REPORTATIO
to the corners
of an altar?the
ecclesiastic?which So while
in plan
most shares
use of the word
for a young
shape as the Ark.70 the particular choices
of most
or from
the reporter, the word seems to have come from the reportatio process, and planities, zona, and limbus are all from the language of the schools: not the from which Hugh of a "practicing and artist," but of the world
planities cingulus,
language the reporter came, came, and in which
from which The Mystic
the painting and Ark functioned.
text of The Mystic
Sphera Macrobii. Lambert of Saint-Omer, Liber Floridus. Herzog Ms. 1Gud. lat. fol. 16v. Bibliothek Wolfenb?ttel,
12.
August
the same
to say whether it is impossible terms" came from Hugh
of these "technical
Fig.
common
31
Ark
CENTER POINT
32
Fig.
13.
The Mystic Ark. The central cubit. Clement/Rudolph.
Chapter Two
THE SUPPOSITIONOF A CONTINUING CHANGE INTHEMYSTICARK
the realization that the text of The Mystic Ark is a reportatio, perhaps to terms with its nature and function in coming lies the greatest difficulty in understanding the relation between of The Mystic Ark, it, the painting that is and the treatise of The Moral Ark?a relationship quite simple and A failure to recognize the simplicity of this relationship, straightforward.
After
accompanied tutes Sicard's
for supposed by strained explanations second basic error of interpretation.
consti
complexities,
The question of whether the image referred to in TheMoral Ark is the same as that described
in The Mystic Ark is not really at issue.71 What is at The inconsistencies between issue, at least to Sicard, are the seeming Moral Ark and the text of The Mystic Ark, inconsistencies that suggest to
him that Hugh's conception of TheMystic Ark changed throughout the course
of his
lectures.
According
to Sicard,
the lost original
image
of the
lectures should be thought of as having presented only the initial stage in this change, a stage represented by that the text of The Mystic Ark, on as presenting a supposed later stage in The Moral and their expression fuller
of the Ark.
the text of The Moral the other that came Ark,
should
hand, about
a stage
Ark. He
be understood
after the Ark
that
believes
lectures a much
represents two recen identified
Furthermore, conception having of the manuscript Sicard believes that the first recension tradition, the of fuller initial this while the revi represents expression conception; more sions of the second recension indicate yet changes by Hugh himself sions
as well
as a
hopelessly of the first recension. the case.
failed None
of the careless text attempt at a simplification seems to be of these suppositions, however,
34
CENTER POINT
1. THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE FROM THE ORIGINAL PAINTING OF THEMYSTIC ARK TO THE REPORTATIO OF THEMYSTIC ARK The
first
that there had been
supposition,
a continuing
change
from
the
original painting of TheMystic Ark to the reportatio of TheMystic Ark, is related texts. As Ark
to the subject Imentioned
to The Moral
Ark
of the relative
of the Ark lectures and chronology a as a in The Mystic result both of reference earlier, as in and of the repeated indication already written
that the painting of The Mystic Ark was already extant, view has been that The Moral Ark was written first, with
Ark
The Moral traditional
the the
text of TheMystic Ark following shortly after, so that itmight provide a of the image referred to in The Moral Ark. description van den Eynde, who has has been further elaborated by Damien out basic relative and absolute chronologies of the works of Hugh.72
written This worked
Van den Eynde uses Hugh's around
which
he establishes
Sententie de divinitate as the fixed point his
relative
chronology
of the Ark
texts,
see
as and shortly before the Sententie ing The Moral Ark having been written to the intricacies of his argument The Mystic Ark as shortly after. Keeping a minimum, let me say that van den Eynde's overall structure of a num of of ber of groupings the complete works sound, appears body Hugh's the exact
though
relative
is placed
order within
seems
to need
the particular further work.
in which
group
The
Mystic Ark For example, he argues that The Moral Ark precedes the Sententie be cause the discussion in The of the works of creation and of restoration is "rambling" the Sententie presents and "scattered," while the van den Eynde fails to take into more What subject systematically.73 is that The Moral Ark is an example of a literary genre that consideration a or to evoke collatio discussion among attempts intellectual/spiritual
Moral
Ark
same
highly
educated
privileges
a more
As such, participants. or less conversational of the human
instability topic?the to its creator?over any more
heart
focused
tion, though it is fundamentally
or
it is experiential of
in feeling and its immediate
presentation and the restoration systematic
theological
of the soul presenta
informed by theology and systematic
on the other hand, is a reportatio of an of thought. The Sententie, the De sacramentis. As greatest systematic theology, early form of Hugh's is nothing less than mandatory. The basic format such, a systematized
modes
discussions
of the works
of creation
and of restoration
in the two writings
are equally true to their own genres. In a somewhat of the relation similar vein, van den Eynde's discussion between the Sententie and The Mystic Ark is based on the seeming theolog
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
35
of the concept of the periods of natural ical development law, the written above.74 In this, it suffers from a lack of aware law, and grace, mentioned ness that The Mystic Ark is a reportatio (i.e., it was not written by Hugh on the three periods in The the and that passage Mystic Ark personally) but written of having been based on a previously appearance "short piece" or "note" given to the reporter by Hugh. unpublished van den the date of Hugh's As to absolute chronology, Eynde establishes gives
every
Sententie
as 1127 or a little later. He
de divinitate
thus sees The Moral
Ark
as having been written shortly before 1127 and TheMystic Ark shortly af in 1128 or 1129.75 ter, the latter probably to van den Eynde's Sicard essentially subscribes lectures on The Mystic esizing that Hugh's original time
1125
around
to
1126.76 He
1126 to 1127, Hugh put the material the form of The Moral Ark. Following
chronologies, hypoth Ark were held some
that sometime suggests of these lectures down van den Eynde,
Sicard
later, around in writing in accepts
1128
or 1129 for the date of the text of TheMystic Ark. His argument that the conception on
over the course of time focuses Ark changed and the of the Ark: the three periods elements of the quaternary the seasonal component harmony).
of The Mystic two major
primarily cosmos (particularly More specifically, of the periods in the original
fundamental element feels that the absolutely of natural law, and grace was not present law, the written was not in The Moral Ark it because image fully discussed Sicard
time, since the text of The Mystic Ark does have a of the history of salvation, he thinks the three periods that this subject was conceptually developed by Hugh only after the orig was were But the state Ark held and The Moral inal lectures written.77
(Fig. 11). At full statement
ment
the same on
on the three periods in The Mystic Ark seems to be, as I have argued, sometime and so would have been written the reporter, by
an insertion
there is the reportatio of The Mystic Ark.78 And the fact is, whether are referred to a full discussion in The Moral Ark or not, the three periods it plain that the subject was pres in that treatise in such a way as to make
before
even though in an integral way in the original painting, reason for Hugh to take it up in The Moral Ark compelling narrower are much aims than those of The Mystic whose ing in The Moral Ark, Hugh writes about the Ark: ample, ent
there was
no
itself, a writ For ex
Ark.
cubits indicates the present age, which ex length of three hundred the period of natural law, the period of tends through three periods: of and the written law, period grace.79 The
Given that he has just introduced the painting into his discussion at this is point and is taking up the meaning of the length of the Ark?which
CENTER POINT
36
"the present at creation,
the Church, time, through which age," historical advances toward the end of time?there would
which seem
began to be no
to the three periods in the text, except for this reference explanation in the image, re it is directly related to the presence of these periods or how little attention to them was useful to Hugh gardless of how much other that
in the specific theme of TheMoral Ark, which is the instability of the hu man
heart
and
the restoration
tory of salvation.
Indeed, Hugh
to its creator
of the soul goes on
and not
in the same passage
the his
to say that
. . . the re of the world, holy Church, which began with the beginning ceived redemption the immolation the in of Lamb the through spotless ... the Church, which was from the of of time, grace period beginning was redeemed at the end of an age.80 to the same progression in The Mystic is an explicit reference depicted to the period to of natural creation the law, period of written the be law, and so to the Lamb of God in the central cubit, which marks
This Ark
from
of the period of grace. ginning Further on in The Moral Ark, Hugh the hori again explicitly mentions written of "the natural zontal progression law," "the law," and "the period to of grace," after which there is a discussion of the same triad in relation the three
two-dimensional
painting,
as the
ally,81with the (horizontal) length of the Ark being understood macrocosmic
temporal until periods
temporal time, and the (vertical) cent of the individual
a
stages of the Ark (Fig. 4). The Mystic Ark, to be understood is meant three-dimension
vertical
successive
progression its communal height being soul through
a series
of humankind return
of through to its creator at the end of
seen as the microcosmic a series
states
spiritual as in its own
of spiritual is referring in The That spiritual particular Hugh construct in the image of The Moral Ark to the same, complete found Mystic Ark is quite clear from his specific citation of this triad as "Natura" states rather than as tem "Lex scripta" and "Gratia"?that is, as spiritual to its creator.82
return
poral
three
periods?these
terms being
all but
identical
with
the inscrip
tions from the painting of TheMystic Ark83 Aside
from
this,
other components
there
are a number
of references
in The Moral
Ark
of The Mystic Ark that are integrally related to the
can three periods and that, as a whole, only have been incorporated the three periods?something the image as part of a system that included was in place at the time of the writing of The Moral that necessarily For example, associated with Adam and so with natural Paradise, however
complex
to
the
image
of Paradise
is in the Ark,
is discussed.
into
Ark. law, The
flight of the Chosen People from Egypt and their exile to Babylon are
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
referred
repeatedly The Mystic
in and Babylon relate almost exclusively of natural law and written law, respectively.
to the periods (in the form of the Twelve
Ark
The Twelve
to; Egypt
37
are mentioned, Patriarchs) the period of natural law to that
Tribes
to the transition from these pertaining law in this particular of the written context.84
is even
There
a discussion
east-west of the focal point of hu of Hugh's temporal-spatial progression man a can in this context, only have been indicated history, subject that, in conjunction the component of the three periods with a mappa through mundi.
And
are a number
there
of other
as well.85 There to the three periods the three periods was integrated into Ark
both
and vertically,
horizontally
related images and inscriptions is thus no doubt but that the idea of the image referred to in The Moral and in the most fundamental way,
just as the text of TheMystic Ark has it. is the same with the cosmos, the components of which The situation are presented text in the of The Mystic Ark under the traditional groupings of earth, air, and ether (Fig. 4). Sicard thinks the cosmos was not present
in the original painting of TheMystic Ark because neither it nor its indi are discussed in any significant way components that describes the cosmos thinks that the section
vidual He
in The Moral
Ark.86
in the text of The
of the cosmos is simply "optional," that the components "do Mystic an essential part of his teaching, not constitute in the eyes of Hugh and to them." This that he did not attach any major he says despite importance Ark
cannot
that the cosmic compo help but conclude a in the harmonious fashion but the doc complete image that their introduction achieves is a progress toward amore
the fact that he himself nents
"not only
trinal progress overall complete
vision."87
But
the vision
was
there, and itwas theory of the works
always
al
of indeed, the very nature of Hugh's ways complete; creation is fundamentally and of restoration based on such a necessarily vision. And, in fact, Hugh refers to "the structure of the cosmos" complete corpus, again and again in The Moral Ark, now calling it the universitatis now the machina now the mundi machina, universitatis?all the meaning same thing (mundus means in Latin)?just both "cosmos" and "world" as he calls it the machina in The Mystic Ark (through universitatis the re and porter), sacramentis88 in The Moral But
the universitatis He Ark,
machina
in both
De
tribus diebus
and De
refer to the general component of the cosmos to he refers its constituent parts. though rarely are not an it is not because of the they integral part
thus does even
if this is the case,
are not an of The Mystic Ark, but because painting they integral part of the specific theme of The Moral Ark, a point that will soon be taken up. are to these individual cosmic Still, references components virtually constant zone of the earth, in The Moral Ark. For example, the regarding
38
CENTER POINT
in his discussion of the length of theArk?the upon
Ark being directly imposed
in the painting of The Mystic Ark?Hugh speaks of one's to from the beginning of the world its end, something roaming
the world
thoughts
that in the context of the painting of the Ark would
suggest that the
in the form of a mappa
world, to the Ark
mundi, was present at this point.89 He refers a theme of necessar that, by definition, Hugh's
of the Church,
ilymust reach from the beginning of theworld (the mappa mundi) to the end.90 He
all of the nations
tells how
come
from
the four
corners
of the
as from the four corners of the earth, which appear to they visually in the painting of The Mystic Ark (the sixty men and sixty women of the four ascents) and which, it is no great leap of logic to assume, they did in the painting that existed at the time of the writing of The Moral Ark.91
Ark do
In a discussion with
the world
of the soul's at the bottom,
ascent God
to God,
he
at the top,
an employs "exemplum" and the soul in between,
precisely the vertical configuration of the painting of TheMystic Ark and a coincidence.92
hardly
of human
point by definition
of the focal theory of the east-west progression in which he refers to a number of specific sites, is
His
history, of the mappa based upon the spatial sequence mundi? in be very whose absence the would painting again, something original of this the logic of Sicard's argument, odd, following given the presence to in of works And he refers the the of The Moral Ark.93 sequence theory restoration
from
the beginning
of the world
to its end,
something
that
could be conveyed in the visual context of TheMystic Ark only by an im age of the world.94 on most is the seasonal that Sicard focuses The part of the cosmos in the zone of the air (Fig. 2, no. of the quaternary component harmony, was not pres that the quaternary 9; Fig. 9). He believes harmony over ent in the original painting the coordination because the confusion as recorded in the text of The Mystic Ark and component, out of agreement with the orientation have been above, would
of its seasonal discussed
as I have shown, not of the rest of the image.95 However, only is the text was a so not written of The Mystic Ark this passage (and reportatio by a was the mistake introduced the confusion but simple by Hugh himself), up his text from a literary source rather of the painting itself; there is no evidence was that this fairly straightforward whatsoever component incorrectly as in the original with the elements of the three oriented And, painting. har of the quaternary and the Earth, the seasonal component periods same to in in in the is The Moral referred Ark, fact, passage mony clearly mentioned earlier on the four ways of going forth that was copied by the as a result of working reporter than from direct observation
reporter directly from TheMoral Ark into TheMystic Ark.96 In TheMoral
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
and of restoration
of creation
the works
Ark,
of
the
soul's
constitute
39
the basis of Hugh's
to its creator.
restoration
Following Hugh's of works of creation: the ways showing through In the passage the six days of creation or through the four elements.97 just in his the four elements discussion of the mentioned, employs Hugh serve his rhetorical of creation, since they better than works purposes refers to the four seasons as well, would the six days and, in the process, com both the four elements and the four seasons constituting important presentation are two main logic, there
of the quaternary toward Furthermore,
ponents that
is more
Moral
Ark,
harmony. the end of The Moral
an overview
of The Mystic
Ark
Ark?in than
says about properly speaking?Hugh of Chalcidius and others, reminiscent
guage
a brief
it is a summary The Mystic Ark,
is portrayed might be called the structure of the cosmos of its individual components and the harmony explained.98
What
The
the universitatis
of the cosmos,"
"structure
visual
contemporary in such detail
tells us, is the same
culture
in The Mystic
Ark
synopsis of The in lan
there,
of corpus, as the evidence structure that is described
as the machina
universitatis
and whose
a harmony of the elements quaternary harmony?includes seasons and indicates, (cf. Byrhtferth's Diagram, Fig. 14).99 The evidence so zone and the of that the the air, was therefore, quaternary harmony, even in the original painting of The Mystic if it Ark, very much present was not a focus of attention in The Moral Ark. core?the
As
to the zone
sees as now
of the ether?which, oval, now circular100?the are those associated with
components vision of Isaiah in The Moral Sicard
admits
that of the air, Sicard along with most to its references pervasive the figure of Christ based on the
the description of the painting (Isaiah 6:1-3) with which in the original Ark opens, and whose presence painting it is Here said that "the whole earth is filled with (Fig. 4).101
his majesty" (based on Isaiah 6:3), "majesty" being the term used to de in The Mystic Ark?and in the lec scribe the figure of Christ presumably to tures as well?as in the word "glory," found Isaiah.102 The pas opposed on
sage goes
to say how
this figure
fills
"heaven
and
earth"
( Jeremiah
23:24); how "the heaven is [his] throne, the earth [his] footstool" (Isaiah 66:1); upon
"the cycle of time and the revolution of ages . . . return and so on. One of the most themselves"; striking things about
and how
of
the vision
of
se does
not
Isaiah
is that
the wings of the the face and the feet of the Lord represent the eternity seraphim covering of God, which extends before time and after time, as itwere.103 Given that
Hugh's
interpretation
the passage
from
Isaiah per
immediately
lend
itself
to this
40
CENTER POINT
Fig. 14. Macro/microcosm of Saint John Baptist College
(Byrhtferth's Diagram). The President and Scholars in the University of Oxford, Ms. 17:7v.
the painting of The Mystic the Lord's head and feet extending fully?with at the top and the bottom, Zodiac and Months and
interpretation,
earth" that cause
and insists
created
time
that the cosmos
there was
not more
in between?it was
would
not present discussion about
Ark
illustrates
it beauti
the cycles of the beyond with all of "heaven and be a strained
in the original it in The Moral
argument be painting Ark. Indeed,
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
41
some central object is the image of the Lord embracing iconographically, or the cosmos one that is seen many times in connection with the world with the Ark alone.104 Sicard (e.g., Fig. 15), but never, to my knowledge, in the section on the cosmos was in the would like to think that nothing
original painting except the image of the Lord; but this is precisely why the image
Fig. 15. 2655:105.
of the Lord was
Macro/microcosm.
recorded
Munich,
in The Mystic
Bayerische
Ark
in the section
Staatsbibliothek,
Ms. CLM
on
42
CENTER POINT
the cosmos mos
and not
because
elsewhere,
both
it is inseparably
related
to the cos
and
conceptually Sicard's view about
iconographically. of The Mystic Ark is, how the cosmic components than just amisunderstanding of the state of the original paint ever, more nature of the polemical less than a misunderstanding ing; it is nothing com for his view that the cosmic of The Mystic Ark. He seeks support are
ponents [Hugh's]
simply
teaching,"
that they are not "an essential part of "optional," and that Hugh "did not attach any major importance
to them" in the passage that begins the third of the unintentionally slightly different
sections
discussed
above,
which
introduces
on
the section
the
cosmos: to be enough for the construction It is possible for the foregoing Ark for those who either are not able or do not wish to do more. ever, we
have
further
given
certain
other
things
that we will
of the How briefly
relate.105
Far from tion
on
indicating the cosmos,
to the sec that Hugh did not attach any importance this passage marks where The Mystic Ark becomes
in regard to those whom Hugh would politically most delicate?not in his middle-ground but to those whom, lenge, the "new theology," no to the conservative "old theology." he had desire tion, offend, already
discussed
the "old" and the "new"
theologies
in regard
chal posi I have
to some
of
the issues taken up in TheMystic Ark more fully elsewhere.106Here, it is to say that, in this passage, Hugh?through the reporter?is mak enough a concession to monastic the sensibilities of traditional and coll?gial ing came of Ark is The The that before this passage part Mystic spirituality. based on traditional spiritu experiential exegesis and monastic primarily of it But however much be. however and may original systematized ality, a that comes after is, at least at first glance, the section on the cosmos of contemporary presentation cosmologi strikingly visually pronounced cal science the school
that forcefully relates The Mystic Ark?and the current controversies of Saint Victor?to
science the place of physical In integrating this important
Hugh's teaching at over creation and
in contemporary learning of aspect contemporary
and education.107 learning
into The
Mystic Ark, Hugh attempts to subordinate it to his theories of the history of salvation
while
at the same
time preventing
the "new as its own.
from theology" In this process,
this prestigious position exclusively claiming to address certain Ark is by necessity The Mystic aspects of compelled a to amount fair creation. Hugh?with approach "pagan philosophy's" of the "old the that certain elements of political sensitivity?recognizes ology" may
be uncomfortable
with
the cosmic
component
of The Mystic
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
43
to reproduce it for formal discussion and education even though within the monastery, it is absolutely central to the Ark lec no tures. The section on the cosmos, is thus, simple "option." Ark
and
But ences
reluctant
ismore
there
to cosmic
to it than
components
as the individual this. As important in understanding what was or was not
refer in the
original painting of TheMystic Ark isHugh's own account of how the the reportatio of The Mystic of The Moral Ark came about. Unlike writing Ark, The Moral Ark opens with a fairly clear and rather evocative descrip from the original tion of its reason for being, lectures at Saint stemming Victor,
concluding: I know
because
Now,
that, in the discussion,
points in particu to commit them to writ
certain
I especially wanted the brethren, so much because I thought they were worth recording but be ing?not cause I knew that some of them were previously unheard of in this lar pleased
context
so to speak, all the better
and were,
In the introductory
of The Moral
material
received
because
Ark, Hugh
states
of it.108 that there are
four Arks: the Ark of Noah, the Ark of the Church, the Ark ofWisdom^ the Ark
and
of Mother
Grace.109
of The Mystic were
lecture
series
pleased
the brethren
Ark.
These The
four Arks were "certain
lectures
Hugh's
the subject of the that in particular
points" (or at least part
of them)
on
TheMoral Ark or Ark ofWisdom: only one of the four Arks, but consid ered by Hugh and the brethren to be the most original part of the ex tended
lectures
of the human
that "untied
the knot
Even
so, Hugh
heart.110
on the of each question" instability does not feel that this "most origi
of the broader nal part" is best understood concept of The independently cause Ark. after of the hu the of the Thus, Mystic discussing instability
man heart (love of the world) and its remedy (the building of an ark in one's
soul
extensive
in which
God may dwell), of The Mystic Ark
tention
subject to the Ark
of Wisdom
reason
for this when
he says,
Because Christ,
should
in particular.111
Hugh
himself
gives
the
this ark signifies to make
in order
the entire visible
an overview he provides of the more in general before turning his full at
and the Church is the body of the Church the exemplar clearer to you, I have depicted of Christ?that is, the head with the members?in
person form so that, when you have seen the whole you [exemplar], be able to understand more easily what is to be said afterwards
concerning
the parts.112
which The Moral Ark feels that "the parts"?of Hugh are easier to understand after one has "seen" the whole,
is one part only? he specifies
which
44
CENTER POINT
it an exemplar the (exemplar), calling the image in the concluding passage
as the painting of The Mystic Ark, same term that is used to describe
of the text of TheMystic Ark.113 Therefore, although he puts the Ark of Wisdom (the theme of TheMoral Ark) in the context of the totality of the four Arks
Ark),
{The Mystic
his
subject
is not
the more
view
complete
of
TheMystic Ark that runs from themacrocosmic Ark of the Church to the Ark
microcosmic
of Mother
And
Grace.
so he
is not
in The
concerned
Moral Ark with fully discussing those components of TheMystic Ark that pertain primarily the Church with any of the other to expect wrong
to one of the other three Arks, for example, the Ark of or its three periods, mappa mundi, quaternary harmony, of the machina Sicard is thus universitatis. components to see in each work
of Hugh's of van den (in the manner statement the breadth and depth of his revealing at the moment of writing, the fact that ignoring
a complete
Eynde114)
development theological now choose to take up one subject, now like other authors, might Hugh, is no reason at all why The Moral another. There cir Ark, an explicitly of the Ark lectures, needs to have a full presentation selection cumscribed of the complete
of subjects
range
of The Mystic
Ark
for those
subjects
to
have been in the original painting of TheMystic Ark or in the original lec tures. And
there
is no evidence
of any continuing
change
of the type de
scribed by Sicard from the original painting of TheMystic Ark to the re portatio
of The Mystic
Ark.
2. THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE FROM THE FIRST RECENSION OF THEMYSTIC ARK TO THE SECOND RECENSION Sicard has
identified
two recensions
of The Mystic
Ark. Having
never
con
sidered anything but a direct authorship by Hugh himself of TheMystic The Moral the differences between Ark misinterpreted Ark as a continuing Sicard understandably? change, same approach to terms in this coming although wrongly?continues the two recensions. with the differences between Ark
and having and The Mystic
One
is slightly longer than of the two.115 The dissemination recension
the other
and
received
the more
recen the slightly the result of an editing of the longer one and sion, shows signs of being for these reasons, Sicard feels the wider dissemination. Primarily enjoyed limited
that the slightly longer seems to be correct. The
second
recension's
it is clear that the reason
recension
other,
is the earlier
emendations, for revision
was
shorter
of the two,
and
in this he
are problematic. While however, a half-hearted to clarify attempt
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
text of the first
the careless shows
the editor
recension,
of the second
45
recension
even
less understanding of The Mystic Ark than the reporter of the Sicard believes that the second recension was also by that it was done around 1135, and that some of the rela himself,
first. Nevertheless, Hugh
tively minor of The Mystic
edits are evidence Ark
of a continuing change in the conception to the second.116 But, having the first recension
from
decided that both recensions are by Hugh himself, Sicard only magnifies recen in the second recension: since the second the problem inherent to clarify the first but in fact really does not accomplish sion was made the conclusion?ac out, one is left with this, as Sicard himself points
Hugh not only did not understand his
cording to this position?that own work incapable on
Clearly, record
majority tribute
this was
not
the case. Aside
as not
interested being of the edits of the second
little to the clarity was responsible
that Hugh logical For
example,
one
from
in revising recension
it, he was
is the fact that Hugh himself own vast his the work,117
are and con meaningless one or text of the another. But, believing way for all of these revisions, Sicard tries to find
for the more
arguments
he tried to improve
that, when
in the first place, but of doing so effectively.
practice
intrusive
ones.
of the editor
was
to shorten
most
of the
lists of names in TheMystic Ark by implying ellipses, as in the list of the the desert stopping journey places of the Hebrews' through forty-two no. 13, no. 4b).118 The reason Sicard gives and the list of popes (Fig. 5, of the first recension for this is that, between the writing and the second, similar (and, in one case, very slightly more precise) Hugh had compiled an aid to the study of history in his that has an extensive lists Chronicon, of such
collection cording
to Sicard, had
lists; the person using The Mystic Ark could then, ac turn to the Chronicon for this information, since recorded it there.119 But, one is forced to ask, what
already user of The Mystic be more likely for a potential twelfth-century or the Book of Chronicon Ark to have at hand, Hugh's recently written in which the list of the Hebrews' Numbers, stopping places appears and Hugh would
to point out, as one of the books of the Bible, was al I hesitate at available the time of the writing of the first recension? The situ ready ation is similar with the list of popes: no medieval the scribe, knowing ones at that?would ever of books?and well-edited difficulty obtaining consider it such an inevitability that the average user of The Mystic Ark
which,
would
have
such assumed
access
to Hugh's
Chronicon
as to make
the re
names in The Mystic Ark redundant. No, the point of the cording of these elimination of these lists was one of simple convenience for the copyist to Hugh's and was completely of unrelated the Chronicon. publication
46
CENTER POINT
Indeed, the general lack of understanding of TheMystic Ark found in the revisions
it plain
makes
a fundamental
shows
lack of interest was
that the editor's
with the subject that sympathy own in reducing his work rather
than in anticipating how the eventual user of TheMystic Ark would go about
the Ark.
producing
show, writings to contrary Hugh's working
Hugh's
as the Chronicon
Furthermore,
the dropping
of these
methods,
sorts
of
lists
to his pedagogical
and
other
of
is absolutely commitment,
and to his view of both history in general and the history of salvation in never have dropped For the same reasons, Hugh would these the painting itself of The Mystic Ark, as Sicard claims, contrary it may be to his own theory of the use of the Chronicon lists.120 though cue sec not recension his from the first but from the taking Apparently particular. lists from
ond, Sicard thinks that the original painting would only have had the first and
last names
should
it of lists like that of the stopping series which, places?a to be of such importance be pointed considered that he out, Hugh a treatise
to devote
planned
to it alone,
explicating
it name
by name.121
Equally indicative of the editor's fundamental lack of understanding of the painting of TheMystic Ark is his weak attempt at clarifying problems raised by the careless work porter records how, despite
six times its width, times
the re a
length
the image of the Ark should be shortened to four
be "more suitable" (cf. Fig. 7). For the rea reverts to the biblical pro the then above, however, reporter In the second of a length six times the width.122 far recension,
so that
sons noted
In the first recension, of the reporter. the fact that the Ark of Genesis had
portions from correcting
its form might
the accidental
reversion
to the biblical
proportions, on the reduction
the
of has actually deleted the very important passage an awareness of which constructed the painted Ark?without any newly in its place has uncompre indeed?and be very awkward image would of the first, something the oversight that could only restored hendingly editor
of the done by someone with a fundamental misunderstanding were altered in the first place.123 This was not that the proportions as Sicard thinks.124 his mind, changing
have been reason
Hugh Even more
illustrative
of how
false premises of revisions related
lead to false conclusions
is
to the Last Judgment and re as most of the the second Hell, changes among significant as In the first recension, in The Mystic Ark is described cension.125 having as eastern Bosom of of the world "Paradise the Abraham" the tip (Fig. 5, no. 11) while of "the the Universal the western contains tip Judgment Sicard's
forced
explanation he describes
on the the elect into "Heaven" angels receiving right corner no. in the northern and with "Hell" 5, (of Christ) 16).126 The (Fig. or to to Last recension omits the the elect second any reference Judgment
Resurrection,"
with
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
into Heaven; of Hell as being
received
being
description western tip
is now
occupied
and while
it does
refer to Hell,
in the north,
making the depiction
with
47
it deletes
the
it seem
as if the entire
of Hell
alone.
Having
once decided that Hugh was personally and directly responsible for both the first
writing port
for these
According Abraham, the Garden second
recension
and editing
the second,
Sicard
tries to find
sup
in Hugh's
writings. to the Bosom the explicit reference of despite as refers to the eastern tip of the world this passage signifying treatments between of Eden alone.127 The different the first and changes to Sicard,
because tip came about, he maintains, of this aspect of The Mystic Ark, views of the subject dur conceptual development
of the western
recensions
different
views
they present entirely that are the result of Hugh's the two recensions. ing the period between
to Sicard, the first According a historical in the end of time culminating recension view, with gives its rewards and punishments with for the elect and the Last Judgment, The second recension, he believes, "maintains the damned. the historio but its expression ismuch spatial aim attested by the east-west orientation, in favor of a more weakened static representation of the universe given one case sums in it: of the elements that the it the compose position by in the other it disposes, to up the course of universal history, according their hierarchy, the 'places' that at that time constituted the cosmos."128 Sicard
believes
that what
he
sees
in the first
Paradise/world/Heaven-and-Hell ceptually elimination more
more
advanced
of Heaven
correct
schema
hierarchy in the west,
as a succession
recension
of
is replaced in the second by the con of Paradise/world/Hell because of the
a that provides something "cosmically" of the universe, of which he finds in the expression
to be written But of Hugh's after the first recension. that happened even Sicard himself is dissatisfied with this explanation, being forced to admit that the fundamental of the works of cre logic of the symmetry
works
ation
in the east and
west?one
of
the most
and the basis
thought that the two different sions
outcome
fundamental
of his
later De
conceptions are irreconcilable.129
There which
the final
of the works
of restoration
constant
and
in the
of Hugh's lost, and completely recen by the two different aspects
Sacramentis?is presented
are many not the with this interpretation, problems in this case, the best place to look for an explanation
is that,
least of of the
issues involved iswithin the image of TheMystic Ark itself, not outside of it.To begin with, the reporter did not describe theGarden of Eden in terms of the Bosom age overtly the Garden
of Abraham functions of Eden
without
in a complex, and
something
reason,
and that reason
multivalent more.
referring to both is a subject that is fully
manner, This
is that the im
CENTER POINT
48
taken up in my later study. For now, let me just say that, in the Fathers, is often used to refer to the limbus Pa the term "the Bosom of Abraham" the souls of the just who lived before the Incarna that for one, repeat place Augustine, of Abraham" and "Paradise," and that others "the Bosom
that place where the coming
trum,
tion await
edly calls both located in the Garden
of Christ?a
it appears on the line cubit because the lim
of Eden.130
Compositionally, of the central the Incarnation
of generation before was bus Patrum necessary
only before
Christ's
coming,
not after; it appears
before the beginning of human history (the sixth day) because its inhabi tants were
removed
from
that history,
from
the Bosom
time. Conceptually,
of Abraham in TheMystic Ark has to do with the polemical controversy in which tion
Hugh of the Ark
was
engaged with lectures. Although
Abelard
around
the time of the incep (and Bernard) may have exag that he claimed a spiritual supe
Hugh asserted position, they gerated over those who riority for the just of the Old Testament In giving such a visually prominent Incarnation.131 place Abelard's
logically secondary concept, Hugh emphasizing and the written those dom
the primacy
law, making came who before just of heaven." Although
is polemically
came
after
the
to such a theo
engaging Abelard by
of grace over those of natural that the latter were not able to allow
of the sacraments it plain the Incarnation
"to enter
in a state of spiritual
cluded from the vision of God?depicted
the gate of the king ex happiness, they are
in The Mystic Ark above the
cosmos
as the the sacrifice of of the painting?until component crowning sacraments in The Mystic of of the the Christ, grace, represented greatest Ark by the central cubit. in the west As to Sicard's idea that the first recension localizes heaven ern tip of the world because the saved of the Last Judgment (which takes are as is into received this described heaven, place there) being simply not case. must include the saved. Their the The Last Judgment, by definition, Ark at the terminus of the in the composition of The Mystic location of the line of generation is strictly an indication sequence of salvation and of the end of time, not of of the history as it is al is clearly described being right where locality. Heaven
chronological of the outcome Heaven's
zone men as the ethereal above understood ways being, traditionally God the nine choirs of angels perpetually tioned above, where worship no. 4). (Fig. 2, in both recensions In the end, the cosmic schema presented by Hugh in its basic structure of celestial paradise of The Mystic Ark is traditional of the Garden (in the choirs of angels, not the paradise is no development There limbus Patrum)/'world/hell.132 ception of the structure of the cosmos here.
of Eden
or the
of Hugh's
con
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
to the confusion
But back His
of the Last
elimination
is not would
the most have
caused
it, but
of the second
by the editor
important the most
recension,
It is entirely
inexplicable.
recension.
the torments
Judgment, leaving only revision of the second
49
of Hell, as Sicard to Hugh's
contrary
thinking on the history of salvation, themain lines of which consist of the works
of creation and of restoration, the latter concluding the final with at which of restoration, the elect as a commu the Last Judgment, are at to their creator, the ultimate outcome of the nity long last restored western in of the which all of this salvation.133 Furthermore, tip history to the line of gener takes place is at the end of historical time, according
work
ation of the Ark; in this regard, it should be pointed out that it is not Hell that marks
the end of time,
the Last
but
To
Judgment.
the Last
delete
Judgment from the text of The Mystic Ark is essentially to deny the structure
chronological
forms
that
core
the conceptual
and
composi
it seems
tional central axis of TheMystic Ark. Far from being by Hugh, that
this deeply ignorant lack of personal complete
came
"revision"
about
with
engagement
of the editor's
because
his subject.
In the first
recen
sion, it is said that The other
tip, which projects Resurrection with
Universal the
has the Judgment of the the elect on the right and the rejected on
corner
In the northern
left.
toward
are thrust along with
damned
of
the west, this
is Hell,
tip
the apostate
into which
the
spirits.134
a person as clearly out of touch with The Mystic Ark as the editor of the second recension be a very perplexing It is tra is, this would passage.
To
ditional for the elect to be on the right hand of Christ and the damned on his
to have Hell
left. But
of The Mystic been beyond
painting to have
as being in the north in the described specifically on Ark?that the is, right hand of Christ?seems the editor's and he reacted as he comprehension,
his revision when
did throughout him: he simply
removed
the quaternary
harmony.
he came
across
something the seasonal
it, just as he did with left with the choice Seemingly
ther the Last Judgment or Hell in his misguided
that confused
component of eliminating
of ei
attempt at increasing
the Last Judgment, clarity, he opted for removing apparently preferring to satisfy the medieval case of in this Hell antithesis, imperative opposing
to Heaven, which is quite prominently indicated by the choirs of angels on either side of the head of the Lord at the top of the painting. This also allowed north,
him
to remove
something
the
reference
to the
of Hell
that clearly
bothered
him.
Hell
locality But while
as in the is not
often
depicted as in the north (or on the right hand of Christ) in art, it is often associated
with
the north
in literature.
In The Mystic
Ark,
it is specified
CENTER POINT
50
as being in the north north with ignorance
both
because evil?the
and
of the traditional
association
north
of "the fellowship
of the devil" in TheMystic Ark?and of descent
sequence cent of the northwest
from
is the place
because it directly relates to Hugh's in the central
the redeemer
away corner
of the
cubit,
the as
into the being the final descent, descending of Ignorance, which is spiritual death (Fig. 8).135 Having elimi the Last Judgment, the editor dropped the scroll and scepter held
Blindness nated
with
the Majesty
by
well?"Come, from me, sense.136
their
all-important have been blessed
you who you who have been to Sicard's Contrary
cursed idea
..." and "Depart by my Father . . ."?since now made less they
nature of Hugh's evolving as of elements appear culminating a work in his De sacramentis, that
of
the
these very passages thought, however, of the Last Judgment his conception The Mystic Ark and stands as his final word postdates But
25 as
from Matthew
passages
on such matters.137
in the second list of uncomprehending revisions recension of the misapprehending and careless nature goes on. As if in confirmation more than of these previous reason?the any profound changes?rather the
drops the phrase et quasi in solio sedens, "as if sitting on a throne," in the second recension.138 of the Majesty the description This is an 25 passages, of the Matthew edit that, along with the deletion reduces the editor from
to one
of the Majesty description is visually the Majesty although entire
tire composition. great
subtlety
sentence
the most
Sicard would
in the second
dominant
component
recension, of the en
like to think that this was because of the
of the editor, that, having eliminated the Last Judgment, his sense was so acute that he felt compelled to drop the ref
iconographical erence to the throne
on which
if it were a throne of sits?as the Majesty no. is it visible 2). The imagery of though barely (Fig. 2, judgment?even is a fundamental the throne, however, part of the Majesty's iconographi is based on the vision of Isaiah (Isaiah 6) and which which cal conception,
plays a principal part in both TheMoral Ark and TheMystic Ark. Indeed, it is the correlation of theMajesty with the vision of Isaiah with which Hugh begins his discussion of the painting of The Mystic Ark in The Moral vision
Ark.139 Sicard, of Isaiah
contradiction in The Moral though
forced
in The Moral
to acknowledge Ark,
to extricate attempts the throne does not
by saying that while Ark, it does in the first
he repeatedly
the absolute
states throughout
recension his work
of the centrality from this himself
refer to judgment of The Mystic Ark?even that the painting
referred
to in TheMoral Ark is that of TheMystic Ark.140This distinction between the thrones
is, of course,
not
of The Mystic Ark is the case. The Majesty on the vision is and he Ark, explicitly based
of The Moral the same Majesty of Isaiah, as indicated by the two
seraphim
whose
wings
cover
his
face
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
and feet and whom
of the second
the editor
did not
recension
51
remove.141
in of the throne is the same in both, which is not judgment The meaning is the throne of the Lord, just as stated in Isaiah, as either case: heaven on the vision of Isaiah, and as in the commentaries noted implied by the "heavens"
or cosmos
in front
that the Lord holds
in The Mys to the throne is an
of himself
In fact,
reference shortly after the deleted not to it is that reference deleted, leaving the reader to wonder? this is a fully thought-out given the clear basis in the vision of Isaiah?if own on a to Hugh's of revision based contrary conception major change tic Ark.142
other
or if it is simply more thought, fully established.143 Even more
convoluted
careless
is Sicard's
in the vertical
work,
the pattern
for which
is
the use of color argument regarding have a corre stages of the Ark, which
system of the three to the horizontal of the system of planks of the three periods spondence history of salvation (Figs. 4 and 11). Earlier, I argued against Sicard's idea in the original that the imagery of the three periods was not present
painting of TheMystic Ark, with Sicard claiming that TheMoral Ark rep resents
the state of the original a later version.144 Ark describes
and that the text of The Mystic painting Sicard also thinks that there was a change
of the use of color between the first and second re conception the censions of The Mystic Ark.145 He feels that, in the first recension, one I will explain text?which the color of only stage and which specifies a moment?indicates to in first is that the be colored "red" stage fully in Hugh's
as rouge and so the highly purpureus mistranslating ignoring as to of both and sacrificial purple symbolism referring royalty charged In the second recension, he believes that a fundamental blood).146 change of conception has come about that requires all three of the vertical stages (incidentally,
(or "red," as he says). is based on a straightforward This interpretation, misunder however, in the the text of the question. When standing of language of the passage first recension the people of grace are says, "Purple should be used where to be colored
located meant
purple
it to mean Sicard misinterprets that the first stage is to be purple.147 His reason for this is that, since purple is the color within,"
of grace, which stage cension
since
is the life of the Church, this is appropriate for the first
this life "extends
the Church
and constitutes
it." This
first
re
is so unclear
on
that the editor of the second coloring his practice?simply the entire thing, saying dropped only that "The Ark is painted with the color purple and the surface of the as earth is painted with the color green."148 The reason for this change, Sicard sees it, is that Hugh had come to realize by the time of the second passage was recension?as
recension
that
such
a
thing would
be
in "greater
conformity
with
[his
CENTER POINT
52
own] Church
since purple is the color of grace, and grace and the ecclesiology"; are co-extensive, to animate this should be shown the entire
... "not just those of the first stage, but also, a fortiori, those who Church, are in the second or third stage." In support of his idea of conceptual on the part of in Hugh's Sicard cites a passage found Hugh, change that he believes
Dialogus
was written
sometime
between
sec
the first and
ond recensions and inwhich Hugh repeats his idea from TheMystic Ark from
of
there were
of grace in always people the role of grace in this pas upon every period, very slightly elaborating to to think, this passage from what Sicard would like sage.149 But, contrary no different in regard to the issues at play in is essentially the Dialogus an intellectual not in Ark does The Mystic and, any event, provide justifi that
the beginning
time
for an expansion of purple that would be both fundamentally
cation
scheme
vertical
throughout
and redundant
contrary in regard
the three stages, something to the very concept of the to the much more articu
stage late expression of the idea of people of grace in zontal plank system. Although he acknowledges and spiritual with order," he sees theological as "clearer," and as and redundancy "progress," drawing already quite In Sicard's defense,
complex." the text of the first
real problem lies not so much with of interpreting the thoughtless practice
his
of the first serious Europe. What
and those
recension
intellectual
positions
is clear about
in the hori
Hugh's "preoccupation this crude contradiction as
recension
"happily
a
simplifying
is horrendous.
But
text as with this nightmarish the of mistakes the careless reporter
of the unengaged editor of the second the greatest living theologian
of Hugh's,
the first
every period
as of
is how the color sys however, existence of the Ark is the historical
recension,
tem of the planks works. The length To express its progress from the beginning of time until of the Church. of the Ark is divided into three peri the end, the horizontal progression ods: the period of natural law, the period of the written law, and the period
is a system of three "planks" with these three periods of grace. Coordinated one of that runs the length of both sides of the Ark. Each plank represents the three different (of nature, of the law, or of grace); and types of people indicates the level of the three in any given period the particular grouping
of prominence of each type in that period. While
each period is by defini
by the people ofthat period, people of the other two types are shown to exist alongside in the period of natural them. For example, were law and of grace. But the people also people of the written law, there in the ascendancy, law were the those of the written law were of natural and those of grace the least. In the period of the second most populous, tion dominated
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
law, the latter were
written next,
the people
and
dominant,
of natural
while
the people
law the least. Continuing
53
of grace were the in this fashion,
in the period of grace, the people of grace hold the first place, the people of natural
law the second, this visually,
express
the
and the people of the written law the third. To are varied in arrangement and three planks
width in each period, with the plank of the predominant people toward the outside
of the Ark,
that of the second most
populous
people
toward
the two (being "pressed" between inside, and that of least between as the them, reporter puts it).150 is how the color system of the What is less clear in the first recension
the
to its de and I hope that the reader will pay closer attention stages works, tails than the reporter and the editor did. The three stages of the Ark cor other the basic concepts that underlie the to, among respond things, three periods: nature, hori law, and grace. Thus, there is a macrocosmic to another zontal historical from one period (the three peri progression a one spiritual microcosmic and vertical from ods), spiritual progression state these makes
to another
to integrate (the three stages). Typically, Hugh sought two components?one of the characteristics of The Mystic Ark that it so great. But Hugh, of Clairvaux?and like Bernard unlike the
reporter whatever
the editor?normally was at hand. And subject
and
considered this
the full
is where
of
ramifications
the origin
culty with the color system of the three stages lies. The reporter of the first recension says about the color
of the diffi
system
of the
stages: is painted on the surface within with various colors not to be painted to the differentiation of the stages?ought according with the color green in that part where the people of natural law are sit The Ark?which
nor with
the people of the written law are yellow where within. should be used where the people of grace are Purple, however, so that one may employ color in the same way in which located within to the people of natural the surface of the earth outside corresponds uated within,
law through the color green, within between the two.151 What
so that here
alone
a likeness
functions
the reader may be excused if he or she had a little a this piece, which is clearly by less articulate writer than
this means?and
difficulty
with
color system of the planks, that, aside from the macrocosmic Hugh?is a there should also be microcosmic color system "within" (that is, between a color problem the twin systems of planks) for the stages. However, arises because of the difficulties of reconciling the macrocosmic horizontal sys tem with In that special form of awkwardness the microcosmic vertical.
54
CENTER POINT
are in over
their heads, the reporter tries to explain he is, says not what the colors should be, gen negatively. however erally speaking, but what unclearly they should not be?aware, so as what not issue is he expresses that the much what it, they they are, cannot be. Thus the Ark "ought not to be painted with the color green reserved
for those who
this problem
That
not in that part where people of natural law (as microcosmic individuals, or cultures) are situated within"; macrocosmic nations and where they are "within" or twin system of the Ark?that "within" the between is, in the first stage, which ismarked with the inscription Nature planks?is
(Figs. 4 and 11). Nor should the Ark be painted "with yellow where the people of the written with the inscription
law are within":
in the second
stage, which in the microcosmic
ismarked
sense of (again, this ismeant or culture). reason that not a nation the individual, The most obvious are not for the first and second stages is that green and yellow appropriate continue the central cubit, toward the end of these stages visually beyond
time. Unlike
Law
the horizontal planks that indicate the different types of
such a color system in sense) in all periods, (in the macrocosmic people the vertical the clarity of the horizontal stages would compromise visually the of the period that Christian system, conception indicating seemingly
of thewritten law asserted itself beyond the coming of Christ and that the at the end of time. But there again be dominant as well, and this is that green and yellow are not appro use to the language of The Mystic Ark, each color "is in the priate in that, of the Ark, but it is not like the Ark";152 that is, individuals composition to the historical of the spiritual of levels of the stages (as opposed periods period of natural reason is another
law will
but the planks) of natural law or the written law may be in the Church, of the their spiritual level does not equate in any way with the spirituality Church.153 is a different the people of grace story. It "should be used where Purple are located within"; Grace. The reason that is, in the third stage, marked same way in which in the the color for this is "so that one may employ to the people of natural law surface of the earth outside corresponds the color green." This is an awkward way of saying through relates what it stands for the green of the system of planks in to the of natural the green of the world law) mappa mundi
that
just as
(the people in the sense
of that which is of this world and extrinsic to the Ark or Church, so the of it stands for (the people of the system of planks relates what most is to which is that which the of the third stage, grace, purple grace) to the Church. To drive home of the arrange the irregularity intrinsic a point of not ment of the color system of the stages, the reporter makes purple
ing that "here
alone
a likeness
functions
within
between
the two"?that
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
55
between is, it is only with the third stage that there is a color relationship one of the colors of the plank system and one of the colors of the stage system. a "preoccupation Hugh not only had he is on record der," as Sicard noted,
with
theological
as advocating the color system here
and spiritual or the use of color in
is very poorly de pedagogical systems.154 Though Sicard's reading of the text of the first recension scribed by the reporter, to mean for the first stage would that purple was appropriate have been to Hugh.
inconceivable
Each
of the three
stages
its is clearly marked with law, and grace. To color
of the three periods: nature, respective principle not only be to deny the the first stage, the stage of nature, purple would be to deny the principle of vertical basic meaning of that stage, it would one ascent attains the the divine toward (where spiritual spiritual highest contradict the teaching and the would level only at the top), which of Hugh. Sicard has badly confused the verti that are at the heart of The Mystic Ark. second of the first recension stages, the reporter
respectively, methodology, cal and horizontal systems As
to the first
and
are to be painted but does not specify the colors are not to be green or this leaves us (except to say that they yellow). While as ne to assume he could that they are nonsymbolic, just easily have
clearly
states
glected The
color
that
to mention
this is why
they
what
passage the editor and he
that symbolism of the first recension of the second
him, beyond simply that part of the Ark between
is.
is unquestionably recension tried to revise
a mess, it. But
and itwas
accepted purple as the only stated color for the system of planks and lamely referred to
the use of green for the earth without any further or The rest he just dropped: tionships meaning.155 to the deaf elaborate interrelation levels, spiritual
reference
to color
rela
to the system of of the horizontal and
blind
and mute the color relationship between progressions, regarding a Far and from there the subtle stage plank system. being change first and of intellectual between the second the edi recensions, conception never tor of the second recension the understood really poorly expressed color system of the first recension, and his revision is indicative only of
vertical
the third
to eliminate whatever his ready willingness closed The Moral Ark with the Hugh
he could statement,
not understand. "There
is still more
that Imight have said if Iwere not afraid of wearying you."1561wish Ihad able to say the same thing, but there is still one more I am obliged to take up in regard to Sicard's views that misinterpretation of the second it is by no means his last. As with the recension, though I have already of the three periods of the history of salvation, component the luxury
argued
of being
against
Sicard's
idea that the crucial
quaternary
harmony
was
not
56
CENTER POINT
in the original painting of The Mystic Ark (Fig. 2, no. 9, Fig. 9).157 present Sicard also thinks that Hugh?about whom itwas said by one of his con "In all of the Latin Church, there is no one to be found who temporaries, can compare to him someone of copying
in wisdom"158?having else's work
own
done
such
a miserable
job on the seasons of the into his harmony was so dull that he was unable to correct
text in the first recension, a very minor mistake of verbally the sea (simply a question reorienting sonal harmony within the quaternary turn) and harmony by a quarter to drop the passage felt compelled in the Even second.159 more, entirely to on to also felt the the Sicard, passage drop according Hugh obliged
of the qualities and dry) that immediately (hot, cold, moist, harmony follows that on the seasons. The reason Sicard gives for this additional is that the passage on the qualities is part of a discussion of the har on cosmos in is of the that based the of the seasons, mony part harmony whose and confused passage had been deleted. But, in fact, the confusing cut
was
part alone of the seasonal harmony confusing of the second recension; the main discussion dinates
them with
untouched. dundant
The
the four unclear
cardinal
passage
and not
by the editor (which coor
of the seasons
remained directions) fundamentally on the seasons re is, actually, mildly at all (unlike the deleted instruction
truly necessary the Signs of the Zodiac should be oriented in the deletion which was cut out as well160). Thus, there was no reason to drop the passage seasons, that
is, there was
removed
no
with
Aries
at the
top, of the
of the harmony on the harmony
of the
was logical to be associated it happened the unclear with pas guilt by association: was inertia and removed the it of intellectual indif sage simply through
qualities.
That
for the real motivation
reason,
ference.
There was,
therefore,
no
continuing
change
from
the original
painting
of TheMystic Ark to the reportatio of TheMystic Ark. TheMoral Ark does state of the painting, the original but rather was considered represent a series of lectures to be the most that part of the Ark lectures, original was meant no to be loose by conscious The Moral Ark is under design.161 not
obligation to recount literally the image from which its thought took its between the first impetus. Nor is there any need to explain the differences of The Mystic Ark as a continuing and second recensions change of intel an explanation when lectual conception, such especially implies direct are character of the second recension by Hugh. The revisions authorship with the subject, an unreflective ized by a lack of personal engagement an unseemly of whatever the editor did not understand, elimination de sire to reduce the amount of text that had to be copied, and an ignorance of the polemical
context
of The Mystic
Ark.
Furthermore,
it is quite
clear
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
that
the editor
The Mystic
Ark
was
oblivious
and
its almost
to the summa-like
of
comprehensiveness
complete interconnecting a part of its content in the narrow as are a part of its meaning sense. in the broader they
of which
57
are as much
both coherency, sense of the word
3. THE EDITING OF THE SECOND RECENSION to the previous section raise two interrelated questions: be of of certain the The Ark7. Mystic chronology degree so And why was the editor of the second recension personally disengaged from his work? The
conclusions
can we
To what
I gave my
Earlier,
reasons
as
for accepting
likely van den Eynde's
gen
eral grouping of works related to TheMoral Ark and TheMystic Ark while the relative order within the general method it.162Although questioning texts on the between of relative different establishing chronologies ology is certainly legitimate, basis of conceptual the specific natures development of the writings
under
in the group
consideration
to The Moral
related
Ark
and TheMystic Ark do not lend themselves well to this type of analysis. The
is simply
evidence
not
van
to support
there
den Eynde's
of
dating
TheMoral Ark to shortly before 1127 (his date for the Sententie de divini tate) or of TheMystic Ark to 1128 or 1129. There is far less evidence to support between
that there was suggestion lectures and The Moral the original
Sicard's
a gap
from
one
to two years two to four years
Ark, from the original lectures and The Mystic Ark, or from one to three The Moral Ark and The Mystic Ark.163 years between more Until further establishes sounder relative scholarship precisely and absolute all that can be said with certainty is that The chronologies, between
sometime from 1125 to early 1130. The evidence Mystic Ark was written is indirect but compelling: for an absolute the terminal entry chronology in The Mystic in the list of papal regnancies Ark is Honorius II, who reigned
from December
suggests
that the first
21,
1124
recension
must
to February date from
that 13, 1130, something 1125 to early 1130.164 The in the Abelard affair tends
of letters between Hugh and Bernard exchange as a to confirm Letter with 77?for which he apologizes Bernard's this, to a previous late response letter by Hugh, though how late we do not know?variously
dated
from
1125
to 1128.165 As
to relative
chronology,
the unusual statement recognizing its popularity with which TheMoral Ark begins nal lectures
that The Moral Ark was written suggests to that in response There popularity.166
that The Mystic
Ark was written
much
later:
soon
after
is no
reason
it refers
the origi to think
to The Moral
Ark
and quotes from it, but TheMystic Ark is in no way posterior to it in
CENTER POINT
58
sense. The fact that The Mystic a developmental im Ark is a reportatio in the original in lectures, which plies that the reporter was a participant soon after the lectures and in all likelihood turn suggests a composition after The Moral
immediately enthusiasm.
Ark,
probably
as part
of an initial burst
of
to the dating of the second recension, the failure of Sicard's textual 1135 completely renders his dating of around analysis unsupportable.167 in regard to chronology What is is of interest about the second recension As
the elimination
to a planned
of the reference of
treatise
the Hebrews'
on
the forty-two since this
the desert:
journey stopping through places at least, that raises the possibility, the deletion treatise was never written, so the second recension?took after the death of the deletion?and place
Hugh (February 11, 1141).168 It is at this point that the question of why the editor of the second re from his work ties in with that of cension was so personally disengaged a out recension. Sicard has the chronology of the second pattern pointed Itwas the first recension of usage for the first and second recensions. that new manu to two it wanted Saint Victor make itself used when copies; one from Saint Victor Ark have survived from of The itself, scripts Mystic
around 1140 to 1150 and the other from 1220 to 1255, both of them first Saint Victor maintained places with which strong relations also had first recension copies of The Mystic Ark. Bernard's was one of these; and there was a web of English Clairvaux, monastery, recension.169
Furthermore,
connections, students Laurence
probably of Saint Victor, of Westminster,
is the significance it was Clearly,
established
former canons, and teachers, through Andrew of Saint Victor, Robert of Melun,
possibly and others.170 What
Sicard
has
failed
to notice
of all this. the first
recension
that was
seen by Saint Victor itself as of the two. And itwas the first recension
the more authoritative inherently an immediate but short diffusion.171 that had
Yet
itwas
the second
recen
on less authoritative, far from being an improvement which, a real lack of personal with the subject?that the first, shows engagement How such a situation could the most widespread. have come became sion?the
was
in the thirteenth the first recension Saint Victor using of after the second after the death and recension century, Hugh long long as the more common and established did had been made prototype? Why have of the first with close ties to Saint Victor institutions copies generally about? Why
recension, while other, less closely related places generally had the second? is The reason that Sicard gives for the impetus of the second recension of The Mystic Ark, this popularity such an the great popularity suggesting improved
edition
to Hugh
because
of the carelessness
of the first.172 Sicard,
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
59
discussed finds himself however, above, which caught in the contradiction an improve even he recognizes: not in recension that the second is, fact, on the first at all. Even so, the impetus for the second recension was ment
indeed the great popularity of the first, though it was not revised by Hugh, torium
as I believe
I have
shown.
It seems
that it was
that was
responsible
both
of Saint Victor practice the first and the second recensions
from
Saint Victor,
the particular scrip for the pattern of
apparently originally stemming an aspect of production for "in the first having in consequence, the second could, be said to have an house" use, while for external consumption. aspect of production Liber ordinis of Saint Victor The twelfth-century (the book of customs) with
the duties
stipulates, regarding the scriptorium,
or librarian,
of the armarius
oversaw
who
in the community?whether inside or out the responsibility of his office to the effect
All writings that are made side [the monastery]?are
the scribes with parchment and the ought to provide are necessary for that he that and himself should writing, things hire those who write for pay.173 that he himself
other
A number
of recent
on the textual
studies
and artistic
of Saint Victor have drawn attention scriptorium to in this passage of hiring out work that could not be taken to commercial within the monastery scriptorium coll?gial side.174 Every work within from
effort
seems
of the
production to the practice
to have been made
with the coll?gial scriptorium, for the appointment himself
the abbot
to ensure
a
referred
care of by the scribes out of
standard
high
permission being of canon-scribes
necessary and with
access
to the scriptorium to limit distraction.175 As a severely restricted to devoted and Saint house learning coll?gial especially teaching, on an ambitious Victor of had embarked up its own building campaign as institutions?as At the of other fast those library?not possible.176 new
same time, it performed extensive duties for the royal chancery and even on the in of these unusual burdens for the Bishop of Paris. Itwas because ternal scriptorium that the armarius had to go outside the walls for addi
tional scribal help. It is known that commercial copyists had begun to work
in Paris
tor also worked customs the work
at just this time, for a number
of Saint Victor sent outside
and that those who of other
offer no
a few things
worked
for Saint Vic
monasteries.177
But
the
about quality control over to these commercial except copyists, for it. responsible information
the monastery
to say that the armarius was We do not know who the editor do know
Parisian
about
of the second
him. He was
personally
recension
was.
disengaged
But we from
the
60
CENTER POINT
to of The Mystic Ark, his subject. He was, in practice, indifferent concept of the text if this involved any real improvement actually understanding can only be described as ignorance it.What of the principles of the qua (or perhaps unsuc suggest that he was poorly educated is better) for someone who was a scribe. Perhaps most
ternary
harmony educated cessfully
striking of all, he displays a total lack of familiarity with the work of a scholar who a school of thought at Saint Victor established in Hugh, to elicit the sense described whose work continued Southern, by R. W. enormous was interest long after his death, and of whom his community the evidence the restoration of suggests?in immensely proud.178 And
the biblical proportions of the Ark, in the elimination of the previously the quaternary in the mistake concerning harmony, the editor of the second re system of the stages?that regarding cension had no visual access to the painting. This could have been either
mentioned
passage the color
he was
because
not
or because
taught the case, canons
allowed
the painting then suggest
itwould
into that part of the monastery where Hugh was no even extant. But if this were longer access to that the editor had no convenient
The Mystic Ark through the lectures, the actually understood or the text. All this makes it fairly inconceivable that a canon painting, as the editor of the second Victor of Saint acted recension?and regular that it was a commercial scribe to whom The Mystic Ark very probably was
who
hired
tinued
out for a new
to be shown
to deal with
recension
in it. It seems
that
it was
the great interest this new recension
that con that was
from in scribes, when requests were made copied, apparently by external stitutions other than those that had unusually strong relations with Saint as seems to have been the case with Victor: for example, Saint Albans, whose
second
bly And
Simon
twelfth-century, requested by Abbot
recension copy of Saint Albans,
of The Mystic is now held
Ark, proba in Oxford.179
that itwas the first recension that was used by the internal Saint Victor its closest for for and friends: such as scriptorium copies first recension whose Clairvaux, copy of the Ark is now twelfth-century, it appears
inTroyes.180 The evidence made
of the second
after the death
the second
recension
recension suggests I have already noted of Hugh. to a proposed of a reference
that
this
that the deletion
The Mystic the actual
was from
on the by Hugh the desert through
book
places of the Hebrews' journey stopping forty-two a tends to support this view. The Indiculum, fifteenth-century on the command of Hugh's work made of Abbot bibliography Saint Victor
revision
copy of a Gilduin of
death, does as well. In it, in the entry for shortly after Hugh's a to chapter headings, but the space for Ark, there is reference was left blank,181 themselves that suggests headings something
THE SUPPOSITION OF A CONTINUING CHANGE IN THEMYSTIC ARK
61
are absent from the which that such headings, expectations soon. Itmay be that headings were first recension, would be made fairly as to of and that the second be made the second recension part expected there were
recension
was
done
around
If this time, shortly after the death of Hugh. were never made is in perfect accord with lack done by the editor and his complete
so, the fact that these headings the consistently abysmal work of personal
engagement.
Chapter
Three
THENATUREAND ORIGINALFUNCTION OF THE TEXTOF THEMYSTICARK
While
that the editor was
the likelihood
a commercial
scribe may explain text that was meant for
with this spiritual engagement not in general was toler it does group discussion, explain why poor work a the fairly mediocre first recension ated for The Mystic Ark?either by or the second recension student of Saint Victor, appar truly inadequate were an models of their profes outside scribe, neither of whom ently by
his lack of personal
is inescapable that this was the case because The to be a literary piece. Mystic Ark was not considered As to the first recension, itwas a reportatio: the fact that itwas not per but by a student, whether internal or external, sonally written by Hugh The
sions.
conclusion
in a different
the work
certainly put ever popular
attention, category of editorial to it, since the text was never ismore
how
itwas. But there given a proper an title or, what is more, the explanatory preface.182 Regarding toward it seems to be the result of second recension, the casual attitude on the part of the editor that The Mystic Ark was a reporta the knowledge tio, and a flawed
one
with
the deference
This
attitude
was
from
1140
rium
at that; it was
not by Hugh and need not be treated to of a respected the author. normally writing not helped by an expansion of the work of the scripto to 1150 so great that fully one-third of Saint Victor's shown
collection was copied at this time (with a no manuscript twelfth-century ticeable increase in the number in 1135),183 precisely of hands beginning I suggest the second recension was made. the time during which edito again, the real reason that the text received only incidental reason that Hugh had allowed a rial attention?and the principal perhaps to in student write the reportatio the first place rather than doing it him But,
self?was piece,
that, by
properly
its very
speaking.
genre,
it was
not
considered
to be a literary
64
CENTER POINT
1. THE SUPPOSITION THAT THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARKWAS ORIGINALLY INTENDED AS AN APPENDIX TO THEMORAL ARK In the manuscript treatise
in a consistent
not
tion?as
whenever The Mystic Ark is found, it and the Ark virtually each other, although always accompany Sicard's second basic error of interpreta fashion.184
tradition,
of The Moral
mentioned
earlier,
his
to recognize
failure
the basically
simple
relationship between the painting of TheMystic Ark, the treatise of The Moral
and
Ark,
ther misinterpret The evidence I have
forward.
the reportatio o? The Mystic Ark?has caused him to fur the nature and original function of The Mystic Ark. not straight that the texts themselves offer is certainly the confusion caused by the absence of an already noted
preface to The Mystic Ark. This lack of clarity has been greatly in the manuscript tradition has Ark, which compounded by The Moral are no less than seven different more that than once, repeated closings explanatory
and one
an additional degree
These have been four unique closings. a number of scholars, but most by
or another
recognized
to
completely
by
Sicard.185The original closing (ending in edificatam esse leteris) is the to an overt close, that brings the writing is a proper ending of The Mystic Ark?a but which does so by referring to the painting paint to not actu in is The earlier Moral Ark but that had been referred that ing a at for this treatise and that all ally necessary understanding plays only very small part in it: fullest;
this
Iwas
going to speak briefly, but I admit that Iwas glad to have had so to say to you. And, in fact, there is still more that Imight have non timer em). said if I were not afraid of wearying you (fastidium us now our of Ark let the itself, as we have Therefore, propose exemplar
much
in order that you may learn This we have painted externally promised. so that, when you have re from without what you ought to do within a form of this exemplar in your heart, you may rejoice that produced the house of God has been built within you (edificatam esse leteris)}86
This is by far themost common of the closings, being found in 84 of the 143 complete copies of TheMoral Ark listed in Sicard's painstaking study it is the one tradition of the Ark. More of the manuscript significantly, in the copies of The Moral Ark that accompany the two surviv employed of The Mystic Ark from Saint Victor versions itself.187 ing first recension The
second most
common
there are thirty-three Ark, ending ing of The Mystic
of which
closing
(ending
examples, somewhat
drops
in fastidium
timerem), to the paint concern on Hugh's
the reference
awkwardly
non
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
65
none of which endings, no are less the first clumsy. anywhere are At the same time, although of The Ark copies Mystic virtually always is not stan found in sequence with The Moral Ark, the order of sequence
with
wearying
come
his
readers.
The
near
various
two
other
in number,
dard. While TheMystic Ark ismost commonly found immediately fol The Moral precedes lowing The Moral Ark, at other times it immediately both in the crucial copies from Ark. The latter is the case, significantly, in the Indiculum of Saint Victor.188 and in the order indicated Saint Victor
When
TheMystic Ark precedes TheMoral Ark, the distinction between
the two
is unquestioned,
with
a proper
closing
to The Mystic
Ark
and a
proper title and preface to TheMoral Ark. But when TheMystic Ark fol lows The Moral
Ark,
the relationship
lacks any
standard
principle:
now
being incorporated into TheMoral Ark, now being presented either in a and now accompanying The Moral manner, independent more two the forms Ark autonomously, the latter common.189 being distinct has shown that the two writings were originally Sicard, however, were in this and that any alterations made by later copyists, presentation distinct
but not
even if very early on. Likewise, closings other than the fullest (edificatam esse leteris) were the result of later, although also often quite early, scribal decisions and were not part of the original text; nor were these variations
prior to the text of TheMystic Ark. follow argues against the earlier idea that The Mystic Ark, when to be a chapter of The Moral considered ing The Moral Ark, was originally a he characterizes The Mystic Ark pri he refutes. Ark, Instead, theory fully Sicard
as an to The Moral Ark (in part because it has no proper "appendix" an to turn in is The which "introduction" Ark, the latter title), Mystic the original Ark because the preface-less of The Moral closing needing not is The of this Ark purpose "appendix" was Mystic self-explanatory.190 to produce to be meant The Mystic Ark, although the text was consciously marily
read for its own The Mystic
Ark
to the earlier view of sake, as Sicard sees it. In contrast as a chapter of The Moral Ark, he feels that the reason for
the sequence The Mystic Ark preceding The found at Saint Victor?with Moral Ark, and which he seems to see as a form of only secondary impor tance?was to enable the reader to form a mental of The Mystic picture it also served to aid in the pro reading The Moral Ark, though of the painting of The Mystic Ark. More he sees the generally,
Ark before duction
painting of TheMystic Ark as an illustration of TheMoral Ark (as opposed to seeing The Moral Ark as the most that original part of the discussions came out of the much broader discussions based on the painting of The
Mystic Ark); he believes that TheMystic Ark offers in figurai form what The Moral
Ark presents
in verbal
form;
and he thinks
that the verbal
form
66
CENTER POINT
in place of an actual of The Mystic Ark is given illustration because it to produce have been too difficult and preserve such a necessarily on large image parchment.191 While Sicard's technical observations the manuscript tradi regarding tion of The Mystic Ark seem sound, the conclusions he draws from these
would
are
observations
misleading.
To
accept
the more
widespread
though
less
authoritative and not original practice of placing TheMystic Ark after The a practice as the to Saint Victor, that was extrinsic primary ba Imean which sis for explaining the original nature of The Mystic Ark?by as conceived at the time of Hugh?can of at Saint Victor only further cloud the already murky waters of The Mystic Ark. How The Mystic Ark was seen after its is of interest, but in this case largely conception original a manuscript in the sense of explaining tradition that was forced to adapt
Moral
Ark,
not in any deeper way. The more of the reportatio, inadequacies evidence?the authoritative and the manuscript copies of Saint Victor in the time of Hugh, Indiculum?indicates The Mystic that, at Saint Victor to the
Ark was
The Moral Ark, and that in this form of as preceding Ark did not have a proper title, or preface, or section headings.
conceived
The Mystic
This indicates that TheMystic Ark was never originally thought of as an By the same token, The Moral Ark could not have originally "appendix." and in the time of Hugh) been conceived of as an "intro (at Saint Victor
duction" to TheMystic Ark, since itwas TheMystic Ark that preceded The in any event mentions Ark, which several times in the course of discussion.
Moral
the painting of The Mystic To describe The Moral Ark
Ark as an
to The Mystic Ark as Sicard has done is both to misunder as found in the original of the relationship stand the significance sequence as found in the later sequence. this relationship and to misrepresent introduction
Nor does TheMystic Ark offer in figurai form what TheMoral Ark pre of The Moral The Mystic Ark is not an illustration Ark, properly speaking, but rather The Moral Ark is the most original part to the painting of The Mystic Ark only of the Ark lectures, and corresponds sents
in verbal
as a subset
form;
of a much
importance greatest sis in The Moral Ark
broader
whole.
in The Mystic or are not
that are of the components an entirely different empha referred to at all: the central cubit,
Many Ark receive
even
the ascents
the and ladders, the quaternary harmony, so on. and the the Zodiac, Winds, angelic orders, Similarly, amount of time on subjects that are The Moral Ark spends an inordinate not a part of the text or painting of The Mystic Ark, such as an entire the Lamb
of God,
the Months,
chapter (out of a total of only four) on the Tree of Life?a Tree of Life that is strongly
related
to components
of The Mystic
Ark but
that
is quite
different from the Tree of Life as described in TheMystic Ark.192And at
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
least one major aspect is not discussed Grace,
of the Ark
lectures,
at all in The Moral
67
the subject of the Ark of Mother that The Ark.193 This insistence
Mystic Ark should not be thought of as a description of TheMoral Ark The Moral
because
ical fine point:
Ark
is a subset
of The Mystic
Ark
ismore
than a rhetor
were not caused by any con just mentioned as Sicard would have it, but are the result of the nature of
the differences
tinuing change, the relationship
of the two texts, as discussed
further
on.
to the idea that the text of The Mystic Ark acted as a substitute for an was to to too both that difficult and this preserve, produce image function of The is related to the very nature and original misconception As
actual
Mystic ture,
Ark. A complex issue this will be a continuing
in light of the state of the secondary litera in For of discussion this now, point study.
to say that The Mystic than a description Ark is more of an it is enough ac than the directions for creating an image. It is, more image, and more was a un to to that intended enable others curately, body of information in a relatively based on the same way, discussions independent as the Ark lectures and discussions at Saint Victor. led by Hugh
dertake, material
It did this by providing a basic understanding of the individual compo not of how it all interacted. Thus, even if some although have read The Mystic Ark rather than produce the image may and discuss it as part of a group, such a practice would have had absolutely
nents
of the Ark,
individuals
nothing to do with the original function of the text of TheMystic Ark. Once
that the purpose of the text of The Mystic Ark was to for the image of the Ark and necessary producing of its imagery so that others could conduct dis understanding
it is realized
the information
provide for a basic cussions Mystic
to those held by Hugh at Saint Victor, the relation of The to the treatise of The Moral Ark becomes much easier to under
similar Ark
as does
the original of texts at Saint Victor. The fact is, sequence an image, and as much The Moral Ark is perfectly understandable without as 40 percent of The Moral Ark appear alone, without of the manuscripts stand,
sequence being accompanied by the text of The Mystic Ark. In the original the of Saint Victor of texts as represented and the Indicu manuscripts by
lum, TheMystic Ark did not come before TheMoral Ark so that the reader could
form
unnecessary
a mental
of The Mystic Ark. Not only is such a thing picture be confusing, for The Moral Ark; it would since so much of
the imagery in TheMystic Ark has little or nothing to do with TheMoral Ark, while much of the discussion in TheMoral Ark is not directly related to the image of TheMystic Ark. TheMystic Ark originally came before The Moral
Ark because
it was
known
at Saint Victor?whether
was di Hugh in the manuscript
for the establishment of the sequence rectly responsible tradition or not?that The Moral Ark came out of The Mystic
Ark,
that The
CENTER POINT
68
Ark was
a subset
the purpose of the origi to the basis of the sequence present entire Ark lectures, the image of The Mystic Ark, in reportatio form, and saw as most then to offer what Hugh's audience the contemporary origi nal part of those lectures, The Moral Ark, as written himself. by Hugh
Moral
of texts
nal
of The Mystic at Saint Victor
Ark. Thus,
was
first
The original closing to TheMoral Ark (edificatam esse leteris) is tied in of texts. Its point was not to "introduce" the original the sequence more to It was, of The Mystic Ark, properly painting speaking. precisely, to others to undertake act as an encouragement discussions based upon
with
the image of theArk.When Hugh concludes by stating in fact, there is still more
And,
that Imight have said if Iwere not afraid let us now propose the exemplar of our Ark in order This we have painted externally
of wearying
you. Therefore, have promised. that you may learn from without itself, as we
he is not
exactly
an
"introducing"
what
...
to do within
you ought
Ark or even a writ
image of The Mystic
ten description of an image of TheMystic Ark. He is saying that TheMoral now encourages his audience is only part of a broader subject that he to enter into in its entirety: The Mystic that they must Ark, something The means of doing this, he states, is the paint undertake for themselves. Far from simply for this purpose. ing that he himself made specifically
Ark
ending
on a conventional
note,
The Moral
its readers
Ark prompts
to ini
tiate their own Ark discussions, having just had themost original part of the Ark
lectures
as an example
for these potentially and ing "by word
wide-ranging
example" of coll?gial spirituality, It is also a perfect illustration
basis
after Hugh had died, Master Hugh."195
of how
"If new
the painting discussions. This verbo
(docere as articulated of Peter things
act as the basis
is the model
of teach
et exemplo) that was the very so well by Caroline Bynum.194
of Celle's please
could
comment,
you,
look
made
not
into the writings
long of
But if TheMystic Ark is not an "illustration" of TheMoral Ark, and if The Moral
Ark
is not
an "introduction"
to The Mystic Ark, why do several of The Mystic that refer to the painting
appear in The Moral Ark passages reason for doing so?196 Although these passages Ark without any obvious come some confusion to terms scholars have caused among trying to with
the relationship for such planation
between
the two texts,
a seemingly odd conceit as Hugh. While the first and most
is a straightforward as aware from a writer
there
ex and
of these passages important disciplined a con of The Mystic Ark in its larger cosmic context, places the painting or less common text that Hugh is thereafter free to more their ignore, characteristic
is that they all take for granted
that the reader
fully under
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
69
to the painting. references unexplained reason to had expect that his They do this, quite simply, because Hugh and small but vibrant world of highly educated audience?the specialized canons know what the role of the and well-read monks?would already stands
the role of these otherwise
in The Moral Ark was. It was said of Hugh's painting of Torigny, abbot of Mont-Saint-Michele, by Robert
in general writings around thirteen
that itwas unnecessary years after his death, that they were so well known name even more to even have been the case with the them.197 This would Ark
texts
Ark
tells us more
in particular, around the time of their composition, especially But the fact of their polemical because aspect and unusual popularity. extant manuscript of known The Mystic that there are eighty-eight copies
script
copies
than
that it was text
of any medieval
extremely popular (sixty extant manu to be evidence is considered of an un
The great effort and expense of producing usually high popularity198). texts in the Middle had the attendant effect that copies of recent Ages were desired, writings were typically acquired only when they specifically their subject was already fairly well known. With most when texts, such an awareness of the subject matter have involved would knowledge only narrow sense. in the The unique of the writing characteristic of the text of The Mystic is that it is based on an image, or, more Ark, however, pre on a series of lectures that was based on an image. cisely, that it is based an awareness with it would of this Basic familiarity necessarily imply it has been said that Hugh was the most aspect. Furthermore, unique renowned
master
in Paris
after Abelard,
at Saint Victor
in town, his lectures
and
probably
that, when Abelard was not attracted more students than
those of any of the other masters.199 Given that Abelard had left Paris to become
abbot
preface
to The Moral
of Saint-Gildas Ark
around
1125 to 1127200?and
that the Ark
lectures
had
given that the created some
implies an unavoidable a seems of sensation?it conclusion that those con thing one most two most of of the teachers and the famous temporaries popular were of his day who copies of The Mystic theologian acquiring manuscript
Ark knew
that itwas
tio whose
a literary work to act as a vehicle
not
was
properly speaking, but a reporta for undertaking sim discussions
purpose ilar to Hugh's, based on the image of The Mystic Ark. Likewise, it seems that those acquiring copies of The Moral Ark early on equally knew that extant copies, this work?of which there are no less than 143 known it one of Hugh's in three most and comparable popular writings on to at the Bernard of time Clairvaux's Homilies the Canticle popularity a lecture out of a lecture series based on a painting, of Canticles201?came
making
series of which ace. This
itwas
apparent
the most
awareness
original part, as is clearly stated of the circumstances of the Ark
in its pref is lectures
CENTER POINT
70
why Hugh could refer in TheMoral Ark to a painting that he had not re that was not necessary ally explained, that he most certainly did not expect
to understand
The Moral
to know
his readers
first
Ark, from
and their
having painted it.And it iswhy, at least in the beginning, that TheMystic could be without and could proper title, preface, or section headings, still be placed before The Moral Ark without the expectation of confusion. It is unclear of and why the original arrangement exactly when, where, it seems to have been quite early. Itmay the Ark texts was altered, though
Ark
be that, once
to be disseminated the two writings began beyond of Saint influence of the less authoritative Victor, sphere
mediate
the im status
to Ark seemed aspect of the reportatio of The Mystic as to text to this the suggest popular phenomenally copyists secondary a Even The Moral Ark. the in so, so, sense, authoritative) (and general pur
and
less traditional
pose of TheMystic Ark continued to be understood, as indicated by the titles given to it by scribes. In any event, texts and the closing of The Moral Ark no longer of The Mystic Ark after The Moral Ark placement
the sequence of the Ark standard. The remained
various
and the use of a number
non timerem) (most notably fastidium appear at first closings to avoid the perceived to have been attempts awkwardness of the original esse leteris), which have given the ap certainly might closing (edificatam a some to to book of the conclusion pearance self-contradictory bringing of shorter
a painting as its basis that had already been mentioned or to his it the reader undertake her own (even though actually prompted and discussions). such an edit implies an effort at clar Although painting a certain distance more from the it also ification, indicates, significantly,
by
introducing
The Mystic Ark was this distance was one of
as found at Saint Victor, conception original and first flourished. Whether first envisioned
where
time or location
to say. Given of the is impossible the continued tradition at of Saint into Ark Victor the The Moral and sequence closing original were and closings it seems that the altered thirteenth sequence century, related to the use of outside copyists at first. But soon, it appears that many format was at hand, with no observable simply copied whatever and the various the fact that between sequence pattern closings. Although and closings shows that of sequence there are so many permutations scribes
there was
a fair amount
of dissatisfaction
with
the inadequacies
of the re
portatio of TheMystic Ark, the same basic relationship between TheMystic Ark
and The Moral
mained
Ark
in effect. And
and
the same basic
this function
was,
function
as before,
re of the reportatio to undertake through
of the broader of the reportatio discussion subject of The Mystic The Moral Ark was the more Ark, of which original part, in the coll?gial tradition of teaching by word and example (docere verbo et exemplo). the vehicle
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
71
2. WHETHER THEMYSTIC ARKWAS PAINTED AT SAINT VICTOR, THE QUESTION OF EKPHRASIS, AND WHETHER THEMYSTIC ARKWAS MEANT TO BE PAINTED BY OTHERS So far, the vast majority
of the confusion
caused
texts as dis
by the Ark
cussed here has been the result of problems inherent in the text of The Mystic ofthat
Ark. But
serious
equally
text: the painting
confusion
of The Mystic
has arisen
Ark. The
over
reason
the very subject for this is that the
painting described in the text is both so large and so detailed that some scholars
believe
it existed
only
that it never
at all, while others think that, if it did, or after the that it was rarely produced state, of the of Saint Victor, the text.202 great popularity despite existed
in a reduced
original painting At the same time,
that it must have been a thought some that itwas a illumination, manuscript wall-hanging large parchment and others still others that itwas a wall or floor painting, (like a wall map), of the readers of the text.203 that it existed as an image only in the minds some
have
authors
on the me every author who has written subject, let most it who has the is Sicard the about just say that, again, prob thought that addresses the variety of issues lem and who tries to offer a solution Without
detailing
As he sees it, The Mystic
Ark was painted by Hugh at Saint Victor, as the Ark lectures and discussions bit by bit, in front of his audience pro in He thinks that the word the of The passage planities opening gressed. involved.
Mystic painted surface
Ark
alludes
to the actual material
at Saint Victor
surface
this word
and?since
on which
often
refers
the Ark was to a horizontal
to the surface of a sheet of parchment?that and, on occasion, a a was not surface wall, but most likely large parchment wall-hanging
this or
a floor painting (though in a later study he describes it strictly as a floor He also feels, however, that this is an image that was written painting). more at Saint Victor than it was depicted, that after the original painting more as a "verbal image"?apparently it functioned because no examples of
it have
survived?and
that
the text of The Mystic
Ark was
originally
to be read as a literary work.204 It is not an easy thing to show, with
meant
a reasonable degree of certainty a set of an instructions written for anonymous general essentially in fact once existed at the time and place of writ that a painting audience, a set of instructions: it is a reportatio, ing. But The Mystic Ark is not just from
the worked-up record not confirms passages
of an eyewitness, and the phrasing of certain were made by direct observation, just that they
of its but
that the painting of TheMystic Ark did in fact exist at Saint Victor. These passages
are few
and
inadvertent,
but
they
are no
less convincing
for
72
CENTER POINT
so. To take an example, the specification that the "icons" of the being nor part of is neither and Apostles Patriarchs be half-images rhetorical no. a the content of the painting detail made 5, 6).205 It is simply (Fig. 5, reason other than that the cre for no apparent from direct observation
ator of TheMystic Ark had portrayed them thatway (although he himself and the reporter duly recorded this fact in his generally reasons) text. The reportatio dull and matter-of-fact o? The Mystic Ark shows a of of this but detail. In very specific type fairly strong pattern meaningless one place, the reporter writes that Spring be (and so the other Seasons)
had his
"from
painted
the hips
up"
(Fig. 9).206 In another,
he
specifies
that
the
be depicted "as if plunging headlong downward and as if jutting
Winds
from
forward
no. 8).207 A bit further on, he notes (Fig. 2, a double-horn, should be shown blowing with
the shoulders"
that
the principal Winds the subordinate Winds blowing
And
single horns.208
elsewhere,
that the Signs of the Zodiac be horizontal while theMonths
he states
be vertical
no. 6).209 As before, none of these details have any rhetorical qual (Fig. 2, But all indicate that the direct of observation reporter employed they ity. an as I have shown, he was not consistent in existing painting (though, was some not this as a working and of the method) aspect recounting a same In of the somewhat different the be vein, meaning image. might said
about
the personal
comment
discussed
above
regarding
the
"ex
of the east-west progres temporal-spatial arrangement" of direct observation it is an indication of an of the practice was even if that observation realized.210 painting, inconsistently in this reportatio, the general absence of a literary quality there can
traordinary sion?that extant Given
be no other
for such specific but otherwise meaningless ob explanation on the part of the reporter. Nor can the sentence "Because of Imyself have shortened its more suitable form in the painting, the length to around in any other way than as evidence four times" be understood servations
at Saint Victor.211 Ark was in fact painted was not at Saint Victor The Ark that of existed Mystic image as the lecture progressed, as Sicard maintains, bit by bit by Hugh
that The Mystic The painted
although it does seem that itwas painted by Hugh himself.212 Not only such a process have been far too time-consuming of the collationes short discussion periods during which
would
for the relatively the Ark lectures
to the have contributed such a thing would absolutely nothing content the painting of The of producing of the lectures.213 The process no way ametaphor or outline of "the practice of some ex in is Ark Mystic of the soul to its creator, which was the subject ercise" for the restoration were
held;
of the Ark
lectures
the internalization
and
texts.214 Such
of the material
a restoration
presented
could
only
in the painting,
come
from
the logic of
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
73
a sequential but not that given in the repor component, in taking up the crucial four ascents of the Ark (Fig. 5, tatio. For example, no. 7-10), so means of a the reportatio of The Mystic Ark does by of verbal presentation, that is based on the convenience rather sequence
which
does have
are the the sequences of spiritual ascent or descent, which through ones pertinent to their meaning and even their reason for being only Nor of Moral Ark support does the treatise The the idea of (cf. Fig. 8).215 than
the painting being made bit by bit during the lectures; it begins with the Majesty, although any production of TheMystic Ark must begin with the center
for simple
point
reasons?as
compositional
the reportatio
in fact
does. Additional examples from both Ark texts could be listed endlessly. of making the participants the complete pointlessness and then the painting observe the composition, the drawing, of the struc to mention ture and figures?not of the recording of the vast number
Aside
from
this,
have broken up the momentum of unquestionably a degree that they could not possibly have achieved of extant that Hugh says they had and that the large number a witness can as if Ark confirms. The Moral be used Finally,
inscriptions?would the lectures to such the success
manuscripts to this particular participants, painting was
a finished to the painting Hugh first presented that of the this "whole" stating point presenting clearly to aid the participants in understanding the "parts" of the
forthcoming
lectures.216
question,
Is it possible to deduce the medium in which The Mystic Ark was painted at Saint Victor? Sicard is not wrong in suggesting that itmight have uses his
on a depicted wall-hanging to reach this view is wrong. The been
can mean
opinion,
means
or a floor; but the he reasoning term planities, upon which he bases texts it most in medieval although
any surface, a level stretch of ground, and space in a church.217 As I have
commonly refers to an open also carries planities
a geometrical of the time and
sense
that was
in at least one
source
it
shown
above, however, common in extremely
in his Prac that Hugh uses frequently culture tica geometriae. When the text states, "First, I find the center point on the to depict Iwish surface (planitie) where the Ark ...," the tone is that of a the schoolmaster in geometry; the his way through working problem term planities here does not refer to the actual material surface on which the school
the original Ark was painted at Saint Victor
(Hugh uses the term faciem
a parchment surface elsewhere), but is simply a natural part of the technical vocabulary of the description of this geomet ric process.218 The painting of The Mystic Ark could have been painted in a number as a wall or floor at Saint Victor, of different media including
membranae
or even
to indicate
ceiling
painting,
as well
as a
wall-hanging.
74
CENTER POINT
A floor agogical it would without
or seems very however, given the ped ceiling painting, unlikely, nature of the Ark. As a floor painting, its composition is such that to conduct for Hugh have been impossible effective discussions the participants
on
standing
tant details of the Ark proper?not
the painting
itself to see the impor
something that is likely to have been
for the original that the Ark was planned image. Nor does it seem probable that would have forced the audience painted on a ceiling, an arrangement to bend their heads back for extended of time, something that periods to conversation, the regular periods hardly be conducive especially a are nature of the Ark discussions. of conversation that part of the at A parchment Saint Victor also seems wall-hanging improbable, reasons use. related to size rather than The text of The Mystic though for
would
Ark
no
the absolute size of the painting, regarding only for Ark relative the this, proper. proportions suggesting Beyond everything or else is left up to the person the image, whether medieval producing in combination modern. These proportions, with a likely mini however, gives
mum
instructions
size for the central
unit
of measurement
based
on
legibility of image and inscrip to produce the Ark?this tion, are all that are needed apparently being in I base my own produc For what had mind. the reporter example, just tion of the Ark on a central cubit that is one-half digit square, a minimal
medieval
cubit
that yields
an Ark proper
with
a
length
of
100 digits (190 cm.; 6 ft. 3 in.), just large enough to be comfortably legi ble as a pedagogical work of art.219 But my self-imposed rule of using his torical models for the various the Ark of than simply (rather components concern and that the my overriding drawing my own) general composi suitable for a wide variety of modern viewers have led me tion be visually to be far more
in regard to the overall size of the work than might have been the case at Saint Victor.220 Indeed, my studies have shown that Ark could have varied the size of The Mystic from produc significantly liberal
Even with a central cubit, Ark proper, and world tion to production. (all as same of the size of the components that carry small-scale that detail) in my arrangement, could from ap used range anywhere productions to size the the of Ebstorf somewhat Map proximately larger, depending on the treatment individual of the artist the of components remaining by for which, unlike the central cu and Majesty (components detail was not particularly and world, crucial). The Ebstorf Map
the air, ether,
bit, Ark, was the largest map to have survived into modern times (358 by 356 cm.; 11 ft. 9 in. by 11 ft. 8 in.).221 A wall-hanging this size could be prohibi For example, the cost of the late fourteenth-century tively expensive.
Evesham Map
(94 by 46 cm.; 3 ft. 1 in. by 1ft. 6 in.) has been estimated
as comparable
to the annual
earnings
of an agricultural
worker
or the
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
75
of a farm wagon and horse.222 A wall-hanging of The Mystic Ark the size of the Ebstorf Map (127,448 sq. cm.; 137.2 sq. ft.) approximately area times the of the Evesham would have around (4324 sq Map thirty cost
one would increase in sq. ft.), for which expect a commensurate was an important cost. Geography in medieval education of part higher The reg both its spiritual and its more narrowly applications. geographic cm.; 4.65
use of a world map as a standard part of the course of ed long-term at an institution ucation with an active school could have been seen by as the expense of even a large example. While the paint many justifying ular,
ing of TheMystic Ark is a work that brought much of this learning to it was not itself a standard part of any in a very effective manner, of learning. However the Ark was in the twelfth and suc popular
gether course
1120s,
from
a
highly
the great
that
unlikely
expense
of a
of the Ark could have been justified at Saint Victor in the
wall-hanging late
it seems
centuries,
ceeding
a time
growing
rapidly
financial
of both
insecurity
and
enormous
demands
library.
It thus seems probable that TheMystic Ark as it existed at Saint Victor took
a It is of a wall painting, medium. inexpensive relatively was to say where this wall painting located at the abbey. But of the inner school, the lectures were given only to the brethren
the form
impossible if the Ark
painting of the Ark was most main
cloister,
the church, given to nothing), whether
of
as seems
these
students
excluded, cated at some
been
other
something side the claustrum, scholars
the walls
of the parlor, lectures were also
If the building. school (about which we the location of the painting would allowed
into
the claustrum
they were excluded of The Mystic painting
in the monastery place include any suitable the church. including
have wondered
paint
on
claustral
traditional,
that might
should
also have
the outer
likely, were
the wall
then
others
other
students
or, as was more
Some
it could
though or some
to the
likely painted on one of the walls of the
The Mystic
whether Ark
accessible interior
If they were been lo
have
to both
or exterior
Hugh originally for themselves. Perhaps
next
on depend of Saint Victor
at this time. Ark would
know
groups, wall out
intended
that
the best place
to begin approaching this issue iswith the question of whether TheMystic to be read as a literary work, that is, whether it originally meant an individual own sake to meant its for be read originally primarily by of an image of The Mystic Ark. and without the production It has been suggested by Evans, for example, that the text of The Mystic
Ark was was
Ark is an extended work of "fictive painting." But TheMystic Ark is simply not
in the genre of ekphrasis, work of art.223 To begin with,
of an imaginary literary description to accept the evidence that The Mystic Ark the
CENTER POINT
76
is a reportatio
is to preclude the idea that to Baudri Homer from has,
it is ekphrasis. de Bourgueil,
aside
But,
from
a
this, ekphrasis literary quality is definition of its far that absent from The far, very genre, by something more a bare, most for is the found than part, nothing Mystic Ark, where, and at times even hurried De vanitate utilitarian, description. Hugh's
mundi is filled with instances of his ability to create verbal imagery that is same way colorful
in the
evocative,
extremely
that good
and
up captivating conjuring manor desert caravans, idyllic
life, wedding
ekphrasis images of pleasure feasts, and even
is evocative, craft
at sea,
the idealism
of learning.224Yet not a hint of this is found in TheMystic Ark. Indeed, such careless work in the first recension? the reason why Hugh tolerated so was and why made little effort toward clarity in the second?was that the text was
not meant
the oral discussions that would
thing why
its own
sake; what
mattered
were
of the Ark, some production the of the poor style by reportatio. This is of the standard of proper title, accompaniments
that followed
the visual
be unaffected
the text has none and section
preface,
to be read for
but
headings,
still remained
highly
popular.
Itwould
be a very insipid example of ekphrasis indeed that lifts passages from one
of Hugh's other works, and perhaps from Isidore?and common passages, literarily, at that. It is hardly ekphrasis typically very or that, to Hugh's mundane that makes references other writings entirely
Bede,
from
of the image, has a separate section for inscrip after giving a description not at all that announces at one point, after one tions. And it is ekphrasis and before another wholeheartedly mechani garbled passage hopelessly "In all of these, we will refrain nature of this work."225 the abbreviated
cal one,
from much
discussion
because
of
was
to be read as a lit The Mystic Ark originally primarily meant as a text primarily written for either erarily simpler form than ekphrasis, It is not a text that lends individual memorization and/or meditation.226 Nor
itself Mystic
in any way either Ark in the mind
to reading or to the creation of an image of The In one place, the of the reader with any facility. of entirely unrelated of miscellaneous elements
lists a number reporter The Mystic Ark as a group, or conceptual compositional
without
any
concern
whatsoever
for either
into the overall structure of The integration a very list of inscriptions is given that is Mystic long not the logic of the concept based on a logic of description, of The Mystic concern Ark. In another for the real-world of the pro still, practicalities Ark.
In another,
of the Ark take precedence portions to ignore such mundane realities something ally minor
that also contradicts reference
to the color
over
the unique ability of the mind in the creation of mental images? the claim of ekphrasis.227 Here, the textu segments
of the four ascents
contradicts
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
77
role in the seminar context.228 And there, prominent conceptually of creation the idea of the four different Arks nor the works and neither their
are ever explicitly their absolute central discussed, despite of The Mystic Ark?not for any rhetorical reasons, but ity to the concept an text sorts not a com because the is outline of of certain information, of restoration
as will soon be discussed. But perhaps the most obvi account, prehensive was ous argument to Ark against the idea that The Mystic primarily meant be read is that the unavoidable of internalizing information that sequence own characteriza to Hugh's the process of reading is contrary to tion of the Ark, that one should view the whole first before attempting to mention the fact that if the text were understand the parts229?not constitutes
meant
to be read, one would
it.While
expect
that Hugh
himself
would
have written
I agree with Mary Carruthers that TheMystic Ark could have
in some way, the evidence memory diagram in my have been only a secondary indicates function; was as its function described himself opinion, precisely primary by Hugh in The Moral Ark: group discussions. served
as an
"elementary" that this would
not for the for outside use?and The Mystic Ark was written Although as of the original lecture and discussion auditors group at Saint Victor, Sicard inexplicably the traditional believes, apparently misunderstanding for writing that is found in the preface to The Moral Ark230? justification to it is impossible the image of The Mystic Ark was actually say whether the text was laboriously made outside of Saint Victor. However, elsewhere, that show copied over and over again for a reason. The same passages not meant to be read that the reportatio o? The Mystic Ark was originally as a literary work serve equally to indicate that itwas originally primarily to aid others in undertaking It would intended their own painting. be re to go over all these points again, as itwould be to draw attention once more to the original of The Moral conclusion Ark that prompts own on enter to into their readers discussions based the painting. That no of a painting of The Mystic Ark survive from outside Saint Victor examples
dundant
in no way
bears
upon Hugh's
intent
in the matter.
But
the great popular
ity of the text of TheMystic Ark strongly suggests that itwas in factmade elsewhere,
and probably
often?this confirmed
is the only function of the much number of informal titles, by any
copied reportatio?something that refer to the action of painting the Ark; for example, given by copyists, the very precise title of one twelfth-century How It [the Ark] manuscript: to Be Painted.231 Ought As a pedagogical ticularly among later productions
par image intended for lecture and group discussions communities of canons and monks, it seems likely that in the same physical of The Mystic Ark were made setting
78
CENTER POINT
that Saint Victor's
was:
painting
the cloister
as the focus
of group discussions, art; it was in all likelihood
public
the not
or lecture
hall.
In either
case,
Ark was not image of The Mystic on to be dis permanent expected have been subject to the material
not necessarily play; art. It certainly in standards of large-scale could have been made public one would that the less medium of any medium, expect expensive though wall painting that was probably used at Saint Victor would be the most and
thus
it would
as well. At the same time, I suspect that there were likely choice elsewhere own Ark, which as a often sketchier versions than Hugh's he describes were were not work of versions that finished and that art, proper fully never intended a professional to be preserved. artist or someone fol Only in the tradition
lowing
of the monastic
artist,
as
Hugh
seems
himself
to
have, could have produced theArk at the level described by Hugh in The Moral have
Ark.232 And reproduced
canon
regular,
a professional the Ark without
monk,
lay artist constant
or member
of
the
could
not,
supervision as my
schools,
in all likelihood, by an educated own
at
efforts
producing theArk through the efforts of a skilled digital artist have made only too clear. Furthermore, more second recension?the would
have
been
elimination
further
the production of images on the basis of the distributed of the two recensions? widely
complicated
of the altered
ages would
have seems
had
proportions in common?the
to have
and
by that text's uncomprehending of the Ark/33 What all of these
im
at Saint Victor, which painting sort at of whatever institu images
existed, certainly seem likely?is a large-scale I say this for tions elsewhere, which format. to two reasons. First, the large size is absolutely the necessary incorporate of the Ark?something that a manuscript detail and inscriptions illumi one would
reading, could not do. its traditional function
to be part of any process of individual the large-scale format comes right out of Second, as a context was one of whose image pedagogical
communal
discussions,
whether
something
that is the subject
nation,
which
expect
by canons, monks, of the next section.
or advanced
students,
3. HOW THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARKWAS MEANT TO BE UNDERSTOOD AS A SETOF INSTRUCTIONS I have shown that The Mystic Ark that the evidence allows, as a lit to not intended be read by an individual primarily originally to be produced and that it was meant of erary work, by others outside was a meant to be It is corollary of this that The Mystic Ark Saint Victor.
To
the degree
was
produced unusually
lecture and discussions. for group statement to make controversial
this may not be an an in itself, of understanding While
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
79
so is intimately bound up with the erroneous idea, assumed by set of "step-by that the text of The Mystic Ark is a detailed scholars, of the and the im instructions process drawing describing painting
this issue many
step" age of The Mystic This confusion
Ark.234 comes
about
in Ark being structured of step-by-step directions. This sem standard artistic procedure.
from
The Mystic
not the actuality, semblance, does not properly recognize In an actual step-by-step the person producing The Mystic Ark process, or she out the would first lay entirely. He general composition typically the
blance
would begin by finding (locating) the center point upon which the entire a that assumes something fairly exact sense of image is to be centered, no. 1). Then the how large the image will be when fully composed (Fig. 5, the general size of the Ark proper and so of central cubit, which determines the entire
image,
would
be
constructed
around
the center
point.
This
would be followed by the construction of the first stage (Fig. 4), which would
on the basis
be determined
of the cubit-module
of the central
cu
either inside or outside of the Ark this point, major components chose to do those inside, he or she could be laid out. If the person are dependent construct and third stages, which for the second
bit. At proper would
stage (Fig. 4). After the remaining of the Ark proper were laid out, the major compositional the earth would be drawn for its construction of (dependent
their construction ponents ponent the Ark),
followed
upon
the first
com com
upon of the qua
by the major
components compositional the earth), the air (dependent upon upon ternary harmony (dependent the quaternary and the ether the air) (Fig. 2, upon (dependent harmony), no. 9, be done for one could, in principle, Fig. 4). Although figure drawing of the next, common medieval before the construction component was to out structure of the entire composition the practice lay general com first. Thus, the next step would be the laying out of the final major the of the the and which of Ark, ponent composition Majesty seraphim, of the image (Fig. 2, no. 1, would finalize the overall size and composition be followed by figure drawing, properly 3). This would speaking, and var
major
ious detail work; painting
process. have been
might the individual
(e.g., the cross of the central cubit); and then the some the inscriptions would be added, though Finally, on the precise done earlier, depending of requirements
gilding
components.235 is not the process given in the reportatio of The Mystic The Mystic Ark simulates Ark. While the general order of a step-by-step method?center of stages, other components point, first stage, remaining the Ark, earth, air, ether, Majesty?a is not actually logical artistic process This,
followed.
however,
For example,
after finding
the center point,
the reporter
describes
CENTER POINT
80
of the central the component that immediately the production cubit, to be taken up in the center point. The first major surrounds component it as if its figure of the Lamb of God were the text, the reporter describes to be
immediately and painted.
drawn
and
as
if the
cubit were
to be
immediately He says this despite artistic practice that gilded of the general composition and the calls for the production first, despite structure fact that the rest of the entire compositional is to be constructed common
center
the cubit whose
around
continue point would and straightedge, work
for a great that would ruin the
to be used
with compass of the central cubit. Furthermore, while the reporter and painting gilding are important to the meaning mentions of symbolically only colors that as soon The Mystic Ark, the same semblance of painting each component as it is drawn to is continued the text; this, too, is contrary throughout deal
of work
artistic practice, contemporary one color at a time to the entire
in which image,
the artist would rather
than painting
normally apply each compo
nent
individually.236 Never intending
as actual should be understood reportatio an was not the reporter?who artist?instead artistic practice, clearly a to of provide component-by-component description simply attempts can. The Mystic Ark in the simplest and most This is complete way that he that
the
the original function of the text of The Mystic the key to understanding structure is an accompa this component-by-component Ark. For within of each component of interpretations; the basic meaning nying sequence dif is typically given (at least in the first two of the three unintentionally a but the relation of ferent sections discussed above), given component is not. For ex in regard to the larger image of The Mystic Ark normally ample, the discussion part unclear because
of the broader
significance
of the central
cubit
is in
on the spe certain of the interpretations dependent context of the cu of the cubit are given before the complete arises situation of the reporter's that because described?a
cific
imagery bit has been
to present structure at the and meaning an to provide actual step goal is neither a syn nor to set Ark instructions for The of Mystic give by-step producing an he is trying to do is to provide of the Ark. What thetic interpretation chosen same
of attempting time. Thus, the reporter's method
of the basic
outline own
independent relatively and without Saint Victor,
discussions certain
through amount of
occasional the original
trace of lectures
to enter into their for others necessary as had been done at lectures and discussions,
information
a structure at imposing for these this end, a the arrangement of the reportatio. Toward even the is in is the and there text, interpretation given of tone, perhaps vestiges passages with a sermon-like some of the reporter's personal notes, possibly by way any attempt
ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF THE TEXT OF THEMYSTIC ARK
81
this presentation is irregular and the by Hugh.237 But, ultimately, must and articulated be, to whatever degree, synthesized by the with intention the original person leading the discussions, undoubtedly revised
whole
that the participants should fully join in, both of these factors being add a dimension that would something of communal Ark. It is in this context the origin painting
to The Mystic of varied meaning discussions that Hugh describes and how he presents the role of the
of The Mystic Ark lectures, of the Ark within those lectures.238
Chapter
Four
CONCLUSIONS
a text traditionally to Hugh ascribed for his clarity and order, could be so itwas not actually written and disorderly: because unclear by Hugh him self but by an anonymous student very much reporter, although Hugh a Not remains its author, morally reportatio of speaking. finely polished see why The Mystic Ark, a scholar renowned of Saint Victor,
And
so we
em the reportatio process ofWestminster, by Laurence was lim flawed, with Hugh's participation ployed by the reporter being ited and irregular. The result was a very careless text, one that is at times the sort described
unclear,
confused,
himself,
displays lack of connection
and
inconsistent.
a weak
Its writer,
on occasion,
of the Bible,
exhibits
gets ahead of a fundamental
knowledge the basic logic of the structure of The Mystic Ark, sources and turns to outside and even incorrectly (sometimes unclearly a lack of full understand used), as well as to writings by Hugh, because of ing of his
with
subject.
of The Mystic Ark did not change in any significant conception course of the Ark lectures. The Moral Ark does not repre the way during sent the original state of the painting of The Mystic Ark, nor does the text Hugh's
of The Mystic Ark embody a later, more of The Mystic complete conception in The Moral Ark. The Moral Ark is a subset of the Ark than that found broader most
Ark
as the the part that was seen by contemporaries no a in view of those lectures or way presents complete of The Mystic Ark. Along these lines, the crucial com
lectures,
and original, even of the concept of the three periods ponents
and
the cosmos
were
present
in the original
painting. there was no change of conception between the first and sec Similarly, was made ond recensions of The Mystic and neither recension Ark, by seems that the more It authoritative first Hugh personally. inherently recension, reporter, was retained by the in-house by the student scripto rium of Saint Victor for its own use and for that of very closely related
84
CENTER POINT
individuals
and
at clarification
institutions.
The
of the careless
work
is a very poor attempt to have been and appears
recension
second
of the first,
an external commercial on the scribe because of other demands by seems to have often been used when internal scriptorium. This recension for copies of The Mystic Ark were made and institu requests by people tions other than those with unusually close ties to Saint Victor.
made
more
are made, the most arguments convincing specific we can the date of the painting of The Mystic Ark, the Ark lectures, The Moral Ark, and the first recension of the reportatio of The Mystic Ark is or that they all stem sometime from 1125 to early 1130, each appearing Until
be about
rea until more place in the order just given. Likewise, compelling as now it stands suggests that the second re soning is given, the evidence cension of The Mystic Ark was probably made sometime after Hugh's taking
death
in early 1141. the text nor
Neither
the painting is The Moral
of The Mystic Ark is an "illustration" to the text or Ark an "introduction"
Ark, nor of The painting Mystic Ark. The Mystic Ark was never originally as an "appendix" to The Moral Ark. Itwas not originally meant of The Moral
to be read
as ekphrasis or in a as a literary work, whether sim rhetorically If the text of The Mystic Ark was used as amemory aid, this was
primarily
pler way. only a secondary group
intended
discussions,
its primary function was to act as the basis for as in The Moral Ark. At least in the explicitly described
function:
it could be expected that those who asked very beginning, The Mystic Ark knew that it was a reportatio for producing The Mystic
Ark
A painting
and understood of The Mystic
Ark
its relation existed
to The Moral
at Saint Victor,
for copies the image
of of
Ark. as a wall
probably
painting and probably by Hugh himself. It was not painted bit by bit, as the lecture progressed. the audience, intended Hugh originally that The Mystic Ark be painted by others, outside of Saint Victor; his con cern in the writing of the Ark texts was not primarily with the original
before
auditors of the Ark lectures. Although
the great popularity of TheMystic
to confirm that it was made it is impossible such elsewhere, suggests was was a not im it Ark public art; thing, since The Mystic pedagogical not up to the material in all likelihood age. These assumed images were or art to those of the original painting of Saint Victor, standards of public
Ark a
which The
was
a proper work text of The Mystic
of art, according Ark is not meant
step" set of instructions ing of The Mystic Ark.
to Hugh.
the artistic
to act as an actual of creating
process describing Its purpose is to aid others in undertaking, way, a series of lectures and discussions
independent atively at Saint Victor those conducted
under
Hugh,
the focus
"step-by a paint in a rel similar
of which
to
is the
85
CONCLUSIONS
an outline pedagogical image of The Mystic Ark. It does this by presenting in a component-by-component of the imagery fashion, accompanied by not most for of the all) interpretations interpretations imagery, (though
that are typically limited to the specific imagery involved and unrelated to The Mystic whole
was
Ark
as a whole.
apparently
amount
A certain
to be generated
intended
of this interpretation by the participants,
of the some
thing that would add a potential constant of anywhere from slightly to moderately And
variant
readings
so, in coming
to the conceptual
to terms with
dynamic
the previous
of The Mystic
literature
Ark.
on the painting
and reportatio of TheMystic Ark, the "difficulty of these things" has hardly so we see itmust have been for poor Lucilius long ago. But are done away with, verbal contortions the unnecessary the ori gins of the image and text are really quite simple, as is their relation to the Ark lectures and the treatise of The Moral Ark. The result is a far better been
less than
that, once
of an amazingly understanding form one of the most important and of the striking pedagogical the spiritual
and
intellectual
popular image sources we have
and
text
for medieval
that a complex image controversies of the day. role
that,
together, art history, could play in
NOTES
the origin of Hugh, see Croydon (1939); Taylor (1957); Javelet Poirel Mietke 30-32; 1998b:192). On Hugh (1972); (1998:11-12, (1960); in Bonnard Saint Victor and (1904), Ch?tillon (1952:147-162), general,
1. On
(1991), Sicard (1991), and, with special reference to reform, Bautier On (1981). Hugh's reputation during the Middle Ages, see Richard of Saint Victor, Benjamin Maior 1:4, PL 196:67, cited in H?ring (1982:192). see Anonymus a as For Hugh second Augustine, Carthusiensis, De reli
Bautier
gionum origine 24, col. 55; and Veterum scriptorum testimonia, PL 175: on the influence of Augustine in the CLXVI. For a short bibliography works of Hugh, see Zinn (1975:62, n. 5). 2. Rudolph (1990:32-47), Poirel (2001).
Gasparri
(1996:xxxiii-xxxv,
xxxviii-xxxix;
2001),
3. This will be taken up more fully inmy forthcoming book on the Ark, but is described in large part in Rudolph (1999:21-29). 4. Sicard (1991:31; 1993:96-97, 99; 2001:10*; cf. 2001:29*-62*). 5. Seneca, Ep. 58:20, v. 1:157. 6. Rudolph (1990:32-47). 7. Sicard (1991, 1993). See also Smalley (1952:95-97), Baron (1957:182-185), Van den Eynde (1960:69-83), Squire (1962), del Basso (1965), Zinn (1968,
1971),Bronder (1972),Ehlers (1972),Ohly (1972),Zinn (1972,1974,1975), Obrist (1986), Lecoq (1989), Skubiszewski (1990:265-267) (my thanks for providing me with a copy of this article), 123, 231-239, 253), McGinn (1992:42-45, (1992:v.2:376-387), Zinn (1992), Evans (1994), Carruthers Poirel (1998: (1998:243-246), and Carruthers and Weiss 129-132), Sicard (2001), (2002). An English to Professor
Skubiszewski
Carruthers
Ark by Jessica Weiss follows Carruthers and own translation with extensive commentary will appear inmy forthcoming study of The Mystic Ark. Sicard does take up the question of whether The Moral Ark is a reportatio, translation
Weiss 8.
of The Mystic
(2002). My
that it is not one (Sicard 1993: seeing in it traces of orality, but concluding 21-26). 9. On the consistency of Hugh's thought, seeMcGinn (1992:v.2:374). I take the word "reporter" from the medieval 10. Hamesse (1988:83-87). term reportator; cf. Hamesse (1988:85). 11. Smalley (1952:201-202, 205). 12. Bischoff (1935), Weisweiler (1949:256-266), (1952:202), and Piazzoni (1982:862-865). 13.
Laurence,
Ep.,
pp.
912-913.
Croydon
(1950), Smalley
88
CENTER POINT
14. Hugh, Descriptio mappe mundi, prologue, p. 133; Gautier Dalch? (1988: 54-55). On the literary style of Hugh, see Baron (1963:91-120). 15. Baron (1955:15). 16. The practice of making compilations of one kind or another of Hugh's common seems to been have among his students. Hugh's Notulae teaching were
by his students from his lectures (Pollitt 1966:8-9). His seem to be a collection of extracts made by his students from
collected
Miscellanea his biblical
commentaries (Lottin 1958:279-281). lack of clarity is a constant in Sicard's discussion of the two recensions See also Wirth of The Mystic Ark (Sicard 1993:73-99). (1999:386). 18. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, p. 123. "Que quadratura sexies tarn longa sit quam formam in pictura usque ad lata ... Ego tarnen propter competentiorem fere breuiaui" (Gen. 6:15). quadruplam longitudinem
17. This
19. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, p. 123, "... et ita duas alias quadraturas longas ad latitudinem suam efficio."
sexies similiter
20. Hugh, Moral Ark I:IV, I:V, 11:1,pp. 20, 23-24, 26, 34;Mystic Ark IV, p. 139. 21. Hugh, Mystic Ark IX, XI, pp. 155, 157, and cf. X, p. 156. 22. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV-VI, pp. 140-151, esp. IV, pp. 145, 146-147. 23. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, p. 140. 24. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, pp. 157-158. Cf. Isidore, De natura rerum 11:3, p. 217, where the table begins with fire, and so one might expect the rota to have in fire at the top, as it does in Paris BN 5543:136 (Fig. 10). The potential Sicard fluence of a literary source has also been commented upon by as discussed below. 85), though with different conclusions, (1993:60-63, But in this immediate regard, Sicard suggests that Hugh was looking at reference to the schema from the Bede's De temporum ratione 35, making The text of The Mystic Ark, Patrolog?a Latina edition (PL 90:461-462). with than it iswith is less well Bede's coordinated however, presentation or the schema tradition for either Isidore Bede could Isidore's. Although well have served as amodel for the reporter, this is only because the pas the schema commonly found sage from Bede was originally unillustrated, introduced Isidore from this passage typically being by copy illustrating ists (cf. Edson 1998:66), something that is the case with the PL schema, whose inscription suggests such a transference. 25. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV-VI, pp. 140-151, esp. 146:187 (scalam for ascent), 146:188 (scala for ladder), 146:190 (scala for ladder), 146:191 (scala for ladder), 146:192 (scale for ascents), 146:193 (scala for ascent), 146:194 (ascension for ascent), 151:21 (ascensus for (scala for ladder), 148:235-236 from the is This ascent). separate reporter's earlier practice of calling the same elements "beams" (tigna) when they are conceived of as components of the naval architecture
of the Ark.
26. Hugh, Mystic Ark VI, p. 151. 27. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, p. 147. Cf. the school text of the Didascalicon 4:6, p. 76, where Hugh makes the distinction between the Evangelists and their
NOTES
89
symbols as amatter of course. On The Mystic Ark as being conceived for a school context, see the comments of Green (1943:485) on the Indiculum. 28. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, pp. 142-146; the omission is from the third ladder of the Cold of the East (p. 142). Because the first two ladders of the ascent of the Cold of the East have colored divisions of three, I have assumed that the third ladder would as well inmy production. Ark, passim, but for a few of many examples, see I, (Tree of Life, Book of Life); IV, pp. 140-141 (the names of the four corners of the Ark); VII, p. 152 (Ox, and characterizations of the harmony). Ass, Noah, Ham); XI, pp. 157-158 (components
29. Hugh, Mystic pp. 125-126
30. Hugh, Mystic 31. Hugh, Mystic 32. Hugh, Mystic
Ark XI, p. 159. Ark IX, p. 155. Ark II, pp. 131-132.
33. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, p. 146. The order is correctly given inMystic Ark IV, 5:2, 6:2-6:5, pp. 96, p. 142. Cf. Hugh, Moral Ark IV:IX, p. 113; Didascalicon 113-123; De scriptures 4, PL 175:12; De tribus maximis, p. 491; De sacra mentis p.
1, prol. 4, PL 176:184-185.
Bonaventure,
De reductione atrium 5,
321.
34. Hugh, Mystic Ark, passim; for the specific passage under discussion, (1992:234 n. 39) and Sicard Mystic Ark IV, p. 139. See also Carruthers n. n. 85,60, 102). (1993:52 35. Hugh, De
tribus maximis,
p. 490. On
this passage,
see Carruthers
(1992:233-234). 36. Hugh, Mystic Ark III, XI, pp. 132-138 (esp. 137-138), 157; cf. the "princi pal" passages on the mappa mundi, Mystic Ark XI, pp. 157, 161. 37. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, pp. 142-143, 146. 38. Hugh, Mystic Ark II, p. 129. Some medieval scribes corrected this mistake, as does the PL edition. turarum
nulli
secundus
"Magister Hugo in orbe
...,"
cited by Dickinson (1950:284-285). 39. Hugh, Mystic Ark I-IV (first section),
de Sancto Victore from
Paris,
BN
IV-X (second 157-162. 140-156, 121-140, section), pp. 40. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, pp. 121-124. 41. For example, Hugh, Mystic Ark I, pp. 123-124. 42. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, pp. 123-125, esp. p. 123.
lat.
in scientia scrip 15009:77r-77v,
section), XI (third
For another view of this problem, see Sicard (1993:76). 44. Hugh, Mystic Ark II, pp. 131-132. Sicard cites Rabanus Maurus as the source for this in the critical edition, but Rabanus was himself following the presentation in Bede, of which the Ark passage is a reduced version; cf. passim, but esp. the description of the sixth age: "Sexta etas, que nunc 43.
agitur, nulla annorum serie certa, sed ut etas decrepita ipsa morte totius seculi consumenda. Has erumpnosas planasque laboribus mundi etates quicunque felici morte uicerunt, s?ptima iam sabbati perennis etate sus cepti, octauam b?ate resurrectionis etatem, in qua cum Domino perhenniter
90
CENTER POINT
regnabunt, expectant." Bede, De temporum ratione 66, p. 464, "Sexta, que nunc agitur aetas, nulla generationum serie certa, sed ut vel temporum aetas decrepita ipsa totius saeculi morte consummanda. Has erumnosas laboribus mundi
plenasque iam
sabbati
aetate
perennis
aetates quique suscepti,
octavam
felici morte beatae
vicerunt;
s?ptima ae
resurrectionis
in qua semper cum Domino r?gnent, exspectant." Bede follows De civitate Dei 22:30, pp. 865-866. The reporter uses diluuium, Augustine, as Augustine does, instead of Bede's Noe, as followed by Hugh inMiscel tatem,
lanea 1:82, PL 177:517. Cf. also, Bede, De temporibus 16, pp. 600-601. 45. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, pp. 125-126. 46. Hugh, Mystic Ark III, pp. 132-138; Sicard (1993:64). 47. Hugh, Mystic Ark III, p. 132 (lines 1-19, first passage), 132-137 (lines 20-131, second passage), 137-138 (lines 132-161, third passage). 48. Hugh, De sacramentis, as "written,"
49.
could
pref., PL 176:173-174.
also mean
Dictassem,
which
I translate
"dictated."
For other examples see Van den Eynde
of this practice with Hugh, which iswidely recognized, (1960:75). 50. See Hugh, Mystic Ark VIII, p. 153, for passages copied from Moral Ark 11:11?111,pp. 36-38. 51. Sicard (1993:64). of Clairvaux, Ep. 77, v.7:184-200. Hugh incorporates part of Bernard's letter into his De sacramentis; cf. Bernard of Clairvaux, Ep.
52. Bernard
77:11-15,
v.7:193-196, which
and Hugh, De sacramentis 1:10:6-7 (passim), PL deals with the question of salvation before the period
176:335-341, of grace, a subject directly related to Hugh's theme of the three periods of the history of salvation. On this subject, see esp. Feiss (1994) and, more and Luscombe (1969:186). broadly, Chenu (1968:172-173) 53. Hugh, Mystic Ark W-X, pp. 140-156. 54. Hugh, Moral Ark 11:11?111,pp. 36-38. on The Moral 55. Hugh, Mystic Ark VIII, p. 153. A second direct dependency cf. Hugh, Ark appears in the discussion of the lesser stages (mansiunculae); 20 and Moral Ark 1:1 V, p. intrinsecus), Mystic Ark IX, (integro permanente p. 154 (intrinsecus integro permanente). 56. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, pp. 157-162. 57. The closing, "May God be blessed through all eternity," is a common, stan dard closing?one, however, that is not characteristic of Hugh's writings, properly speaking, though this type of closing is found from time to time in attributed to Hugh, sermons whose actual authorship is still out. Cf. Van den Eynde (1960:33-34) worked and Schneyer (1964). being 58. Hugh, Moral Ark IX, pp. 111-113. Cf. Schneider (1933:90-101), Ehlers 22), and Sicard (1991:136). (1973:120-135), Lecoq (1989:19-20, the sermons
59. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, p. 157. 60. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, pp. 158-159; below, pp. 73-74.
this is discussed
at greater
length
NOTES
91
61. Evans
(1994:76-77). 62. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, p. 121. Cf. Hugh, Practica geometriae 7, 10, 15, 21, 22, 36, 37, pp. 22, 25, 30, 34, 35, 47, 48. 63. Macrobius, Commentarii 1:5:9, cf. 1:6:35, pp. 16, 24. Hugh, Practica 41, 45, 48, 57, 40, pp. 51, 53, 56, 60, 64. Vitruvius, De architec geometriae tura 1:6:12, v. 1:39. Hugh, Didascalicon 3:2, p. 50. 64. Macrobius, Commentarii 2:5:7-16, 2:7:9, pp. 111-112, 65. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, II, pp. 123-125, 127, 130.
118-119.
66. Macrobius
(Commentarii 2:5-2:6, pp. 110-117) discusses Virgil (Georgics 1, lines 233-239, p. xxvi [sic]). Cf. also the following, all widely read: Ovid, 1:46-51, v. 1:20-21; Pliny, Naturalis historiae 2:68, v. 1:192; Metamorphoses Capeila, De nuptiis 6:602, p. 211; Isidore of Seville, Etymologiae 13:6 and De natura rerum 10, pp. 209-213 3:44, (no pagination), (where he misunderstands, though cites, Virgil); and Bede, De temporum ratione 34, pp. 386-387.
Martianus
67. On
the belt of the zodiac as a zona, as seen in Fig. 12, see Vitruvius,
architectura
9:1:3,
De
v.9:10.
De imagine mundi 1:39, PL 172:133, "Oceanus Augustodunensis, enim zonas dicitur, quasi ocior annis, vel quasi zonarum limbus. Quinqu? inmodum limbi ambit." Hugh, Mystic Ark I, pp. 121, 123, 124. mundi 69. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, pp. 138-139. Cf. Hugh, Moral Ark II:VI, p. 42. 68. Honorius
70. For two widely read biblical references, cf. Ex. 27:2 and Lev. 4:7. 71. Only Squire (1962:63 n. 3) and Evans (1994:79) think that The Moral Ark refers to an image other than that described in The Mystic Ark. All other scholars are agreed that the two writings of Squire's position, explicit discussions Sicard (1993:37). 72. Van den Eynde
(1960); for the discussion
refer to the same image. For (1972:322, n. 14) and
see Zinn
here, see esp. pp. 69-83,
132-137.
73. Van den Eynde 74. Van den Eynde
(1960:72).
(1960:80-83). 75. Van den Eynde (1960:80). 76. Sicard (1993:119-138). 77. Sicard 78.
See
For the discussion
above,
see pp. 24-26.
(1993:64-65).
above,
pp.
24-26.
79. Hugh, Moral Ark I:V, p. 23: "Trecentorum cubitorum longitudo presens seculum d?sign?t, quod tribus temporibus decurrit (id est tempore natu ralis legis, tempore scripte legis, tempore gratie)." 80. Hugh, Moral Ark I:V, pp. 24-26: "... sancta Ecclesia, que ab initio mundi cepit, in tempore gratie per immolationem Agni immaculati redemptionem Ecclesia, que ab initio seculi fuit, in fine seculi redempta est." accepit... exe in the context of Augustine's This passage ismore easily understood on a it the which Contra cf. Faustum Ark, presupposes; gesis knowledge of 12:18, pp. 346-347.
92 CENTER POINT
81. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, pp. 124-125. 82. This is a simplification; these elements will be taken up in greater detail my forthcoming study of the image of the Ark. 83. Hugh, Moral "prima
Ark IV:IX, p. 114 (horizontal); est natura,
mansio
secunda
IV:IX, p. 115 (vertical): est
mansio
in
lex
scripta,
tertia
mansio
est gratia"; cf.Mystic Ark IV, p. 139 (vertical): "in capite ascribo 'nature'; interiori autem superpono Tegis'; medie uero 'gratie'." 84. Hugh sees observance of the written law as beginning with Abraham, not 1:12:1-3, PL 176:347-351. 85. Hugh, Moral Ark II:XV, p. 53 (Paradise); IV:IV, IV:IX, pp. 95, 112 (journey of the Chosen People); II:VII, p. 44 (Twelve Tribes); IV:IX, pp. 111-112 (east-west progression). 86. Sicard (1991:29-30; 1993:57-67; 2001:9*). Moses;
De sacramentis
87. Sicard (1991:29-30; 1993:62, 67). 88. Hugh, Moral Ark IV:I, IV:VII, pp. 87, 102;Mystic Ark XI, p. 160; De tribus diebus 4, p. 60; De sacramentis 1:1:24, PL 176:202. On this term asmeaning the
structure
of
89. Hugh, Moral 90. Hugh, Moral 91. Hugh, Moral 92. Hugh, Moral
the
see below,
cosmos,
p.
94,
n.
98.
Ark 11:1,p. 34. Ark 1:11,1:V, pp. 17, 23-32. Ark ILVI-VII, p. 42.
Ark IV:II, pp. 90-91. 93. Hugh,Mora/ArHV:IX,pp. 112-113. 94. Hugh, Moral ArkW:lX, pp. 115-116. 95. Sicard (1993:60-62, 67, 85). For the discussion above, see pp. 16-18. 96. Hugh, Moral Ark II:II?III, pp. 36-38; cf.Mystic Ark VIII, p. 153. Discussed above,
pp.
26-27.
97. Hugh, Moral Ark IV:V, p. 101 (six days); I:V, II:III, pp. 29-30, 37-38 (four elements). On the relation of the six days and the four elements, cf. Hugh, Adnotationes in Pentateuchon 4-6, PL 175:33-35; Dialogus, PL 176:17, 20; (as in p. 491 (the preface to the Chronicon); Chronicon 1 BnF De lat. Green sacramentis 1943, plate A); 15009:3v, Paris, prol. 2, 187-192, 202-203, 204. 1:1:1-6, 1:1:24-25, 1:1:29, PL 176:183-184, 98. Hugh, Moral Ark IV:IX, p. 116: "Ibi quoddam uniuersitatis corpus effingi De
tur,
tribus maximis,
et concordia
explicatur."
singulorum
On
uniuersitatis
corpus
as mean
Timaeus ing the structure of the cosmos, cf. Plato (trans. Chalcidius), 32A, p. 24 (corpus universae). On concordia singulorum, note the similarity of language in Ambrose, Hexameron 3:18, pp. 71-72; and Isidore of Seville, De
natura
rerum
11:2-3,
pp.
215-217.
99. Hugh, Mystic ArkXl, p. 160 (machina uniuersitatis); XI, pp. 157-158. book, I discuss why I believe the four elements were my forthcoming
In a
structure of the cosmos is part of the quaternary harmony. Byrhtferth's to of identical that The Mystic Ark, except for its nonstandard virtually seasons and elements (for an excellent color illustra arrangement of the tion, see Gage (1993:ill.54)). 100. Cf. Sicard (1991:29-30; 1993:62-63).
NOTES
101.
93
Sicard
(1993:62). 102. Hugh, Moral Ark l:lll, pp. 10-12 ("Plena est omnis terra maiestate eius"); 160 161 Isaiah 6:3 ArkXl, ("Maiestatis"). ("Maiestas"), p. ("plena Mystic est omnis terra gloria eius"). 103. Hugh, Moral Ark 1:111,pp. 14-16. For a discussion of the traditional exe gesis on the passage from Isaiah, see Zinn (1992). 104. On the Lord embracing the world or cosmos, see Esmeijer (1978:97-100). On the iconography of Noah's Ark and related imagery, see Allen (1949), Rahner
Cohn (1996), and Besseyre (1998) (which, how (1964:504-547), and ever, I have been unable to obtain). See also Dani?lou (1964:58-70)
Boblitz(1972). 105. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, p. 157: "Hec ad constructionem arche his, qui plura tarnen facer? aut non ualent aut nolunt, sufficere possunt. Adiecimus quedam
que
breuiter
commemorabimus."
106. Rudolph 107. Rudolph
(1999, esp. pp. 21-29). This is taken up further inmy forthcoming (1999:23-29). study. 108. Hugh, Moral Ark 1:1,p. 3: "In qua collatione, quia quedam specialiter stilo commendare uolui, non tan placuisse fratribus scio, ea potissimum tum ideo quod ea digna scribi existimem, quam iccirco quod quibusdam prius inaudita et ob hoc quodammodo magis grata esse cognoui." 109. Hugh,Mora/AritI:III,p. 17. 110. Cf. Hugh, Moral Ark 1:111,11:1, IILXVII, IV:I, pp. 17, 33, 85, 88. 111. Hugh, Moral Ark LIII-V, pp. 10-32. 112. Hugh, Moral Ark I:III, p. 10: "Et quia hec archa Ecclesiam significat, Ecclesia autem corpus Christi est, ut euidentius exemplar tibi fiat, totam in. forma uisibili depinxi, personam Christi (id est caput cum membris) ut cum totum [refers to the neuter exemplar, not to the feminine persona] uideris que deinde de parte dicuntur facilius intelligere possis." 113. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, p. 162: "... hoc interim exemplari affectum suum prouocet."
114. Poirel 115. 116.
also questions the trustworthiness (1998:15-16; 2002:132-135) the method of van den Eynde. Sicard (1991:30; 1993:76-99; 2001:148*-149*, 192*-195*). Sicard (1993:91-99, 126-131, 133-138; 2001:9*-10*, 251*).
of
117. Hugh, De sacramentis, pref., PL 176:173-174. 118. Hugh, Mystic Ark II,X, pp. 130-131, 156. Sicard (1993:86-88, 2001:10*). 119. There is no full edition of the Chronicon at this time; for partial editions, see Hugh, De
Chronicon
(ed. (ed. Baron); Chronicon Chronicon (ed. Pertz); and Chronicon (ed.Waitz). For further Mortensen); discussion of the Chronicon, see Baron (1967) and Zinn (1977). 120. Sicard (1993:65). tribus maximis;
121. Hugh, Mystic Ark X, p. 156. 122. See above, pp. 12-14. 123. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, p. 123. 124.
Sicard
(1993:76).
94
CENTER POINT
125.
Sicard (1993:77-80, 2001:9*-10*). 126. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, pp. 157, 160. 127. Sicard (1993:77-80, 265-266). 128.
Sicard
(1993:77; cf. also pp. 77-80,
129.
Sicard
(1993:79-80).
126-127).
130. Augustine, Ep. 164:7-8, 187:6, v.2:526-528, v.3:85-86. Cf. Augustine, De Genesi ad litteram 5, 33-34, pp. 237-239, 428-432. See also Delumeau 1995:29-38 and, more broadly, Baschet 2000. The basic scriptural source for the limbus Patrum
is Luke
16:19-31;
on which
see Bernstein
(1993:73-74). 131. As mentioned
above, p. 25, Hugh's original letter on the subject is lost. Bernard of Clairvaux, Ep. 77, v.7:184-200; esp. 77:11-15, pp. 192-196. Cf. PL De sacramentis in part, quotes 1:10:6, 176:336-337, which, Hugh, non et and cf. Sic 106:2, 106:5, p. 342. Bernard, Ep. 77:11-15; Abelard,
structure is discussed in greater detail inmy forthcoming study. 133. Hugh, De sacramentis 2:17, PL 176:597-610. 134. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, p. 157: "Conus alter, qui prominet ad occidentem, resurrectionis habet uniuersalis iudicium: in dextera electos, in sinistra In cuius coni reprobos. ?ngulo aquilonari est infernus, ubi dampnandi 132. This
cum apostatibus spiritibus detrudentur." 135. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, pp. 146-147. See Hugh, De sacramentis 1:8:1, PL 176:305, where, following Augustine, he notes that the first guilt of humanity was pride, and that concupiscence ments for this.
and ignorance
are punish
136. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, p. 160. Cf. Sicard (1993:80). 137. Hugh, De sacramentis 2:17:7-8, PL 176:599-600. 138. Hugh, Mystic Ark IX, p. 160. 139. Hugh, Moral Ark 1:111,pp. 10-11. On Hugh's (1992). 140. Sicard (1993:80-81). 141. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, p. 161. 142. Is. 66:1; cf. Jerome, In Esaiam 143. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, p. 161.
reference
to Isaiah, see Zinn
3:1, p. 84.
144.
See above, pp. 24-26. Sicard (1993:81-84). 146. Color terminology is notoriously 145.
difficult, but the Latin word ispurpureus, on its root; and Sicard's French rendering is from rubeus, not pourpre, which derives from pur
not ruber or some variation rouge, which
derives
pura. Also, see plates 7 and 8 in Sicard (1993), where two different shades of pink are used to indicate the planks and the stage or stages, contrary to figura IV in Sicard to the text of The Mystic Ark; plate 8 is comparable now one in the is there latter shade of pink. (2001), though only Elsewhere, Sicard (200 lb: 129) claims that the colors of the Ark are the same as those that Augustine gives for the buildings (?difices) of the City
NOTES
95
de in De civitate Dei 22:24, p. 851. This is not the case. Augustine scribes the colors of the sea (maris), not the buildings of the City of God, as changing from green to purple to blue ("... aliquando viride atque hoc
of God
multis modis, aliquando purpureum, aliquando caeruleum est"). The are and colors of the Ark green, yellow, purple ("uiridis, croceus, pur 137. Ark III, p. pureus"); Hugh, Mystic 147. Hugh, Mystic purpureum
Ark III, p. 137, "Sed ubi homines
gratie interius ponuntur,
oportet...."
148. Hugh, Mystic Ark III (second recension), p. 137: "Archa enim purpureo colore uestita est et terre superficies uiridi colore obducta." Sicard (1993:83-84), citing Hugh, Dialogus, PL 176:32. 150. Hugh, Mystic Ark II, III, pp. 127-128, 132-138 (esp. pp. 132, 137-138). 151. Hugh, Mystic Ark III, p. 137: "Archa enim, que in superficie intrinsecus uariis coloribus uestita est, in ea secundum diuersitatem mansionum 149.
tarnen parte, ubi homines naturalis legis interius collocantur, uiridi col ore obduci non d?bet, ?eque croceo ubi homines scripte legis intrinsecus sunt. Sed ubi homines gratie interius ponuntur, purpureum oportet ut quatenus hie solum similitudo utrunque respondeat in naturalis legis superficies terre per hominibus terius, quemadmodum
habeat
colorem,
colorem
uiridem
similis
non
extrinsecus."
concordat
Ark III, p. 137: "... qui in compositione
152. Hugh, Mystic
arche est, sed arche
est..."
153. Cf. Hugh, De sacramentis 1:10:6, 1:10:8, PL 176:339, 341, among other places, where Hugh strongly makes the point that there were saved in all periods. 154. Hugh, De tribus maximis, p. 490. On Hugh and color, see Carruthers (1992:233-234). 155. Hugh, Mystic Ark III (second recension), p. 137, quoted above, p. 53. 156. Hugh, Moral Ark IV:IX, p. 117. 157.
See
above,
pp.
40-45.
158. Necrologium S. Victoris Sicard 1993:85.
(February
11), p. 541.
159.
160. Hugh, Mystic Ark XI, p. 159. 161. Cf. Hugh, Moral Ark IV:IX, p. 117, where Hugh that could have been said.
states that there ismore
162. See above, pp. 36-37. 163. Sicard (1993:132-133).
In a later study (2001b:130), Sicard gets even more that The Moral Ark was made first, with The Mystic Ark specific, stating later. following eighteen months 164. Hugh, Mystic Ark II, p. 131. the dating of Bernard's letter, see the note regarding this subject in the critical edition, Bernard of Clairvaux, Ep. 77, v.7:184; and Luscombe 1969:26 n. 6.
165. On
166. Hugh, Moral
Ark 1:1,p. 3.
96 CENTER POINT
167.
Sicard (1993:133-137). 168. Hugh, Mystic Ark X, p. 156. This papal regnancy list of the second
suggestion is not contradicted by the recension, which is truncated after the second pope; Mystic Ark II, p. 130. On the death of Hugh, see Croydon (1939:248), who makes a convincing argument for the year being 1141
and not
1142 (cf. Squire 1962:13). are Paris, 169. Sicard (1993:97-99; 2001:79*, 81*, 152*). The manuscripts 717 (Sicard 2001:43*) and Paris, BnF lat. 14506 (Sicard Bib. Mazarine 170.
2001:45*-46*). Sicard (1993:97-98;
171.
Sicard
2001:79*,
81*).
(2001:192*).
172.
Sicard (1993:96-97). 173. Liber ordinis S. Victoris
19, p. 79: "Omnes scripturae, quae in ecclesia siue intus siue foris fiunt, ad eius officium pertinent, ut ipse scriptoribus pargamena et cetera, quae ad scribendum necessaria sunt, prouideat, et eos qui pro precio scribunt, ipse conducat." On the armarius at Saint Victor, see Jocqu? (1991:74-79). 174. Stirnemann (1990, esp. pp. 60, 72), Gasparri (1991), Jocqu? (1991:74-79), Stirnemann (1991), Kaufmann (1997) (my thanks to Virginia of this article), Rouse (2000:v. 1:26-27). 175. Liber ordinis S. Victoris 19, pp. 79-81. 176. Gasparri (1991). 177. Stirnemann (1990, esp. pp. 60, 72), Gasparri Kaufmann (1997). 178.
for a copy
(1991), Stirnemann
(1991),
(1970) and esp. Southern (1982:113). For the view of Hugh the community of Saint Victor, see the liturgical commemoration S. Victoris (Febru of him on the anniversary of his death inNecrologium more a unusual for less but formal ary 11), p. 541; testimony, see the Southern
within
Indiculum, briefly discussed below; on the Indiculum, see de Ghellinck (1910) and Bischoff (1935). Outside the abbey, the sources are too nu merous to cite; but Robert of Torigny might be thought of as being repre sentative, noting that Hugh's writings are too widely known have to bother citing them; De Immutatione 5, PL 202:1313. 179. Oxford,
Bodleian
Library, Laud. Misc.
to have to
370 (Sicard 2001:41*);
cited by
Squire (1962:19). 180. Troyes, Bib. mun. 301 (Sicard 2001:48*). 181. Indiculum, pp. 278-279: "Et sunt capitula <* * *>." Cf. de Ghellinck (1910:276). On the headings in The Mystic Ark, see Sicard (2001:258*-269*). 182. On the absence of a title to the The Mystic Ark, see Sicard (2001:255*-258*). 183. Gasparri (1991:127-128). 184. Of eighty-eight complete,
of The Mystic
185.
of the previous
extant manuscripts three stand alone; Sicard (2001:61*-62*). Sicard (1993:105-112), including a discussion on this. See also Goy
(1976:212-237).
Ark, only literature
NOTES
97
186. Hugh, Moral Ark IV:IX, p. 117: "Breuiter dicturus eram, sed fateor uobis multa me loqui delectat. Et erat adhuc fortassis quod dicerem, si uestrum fastidium non timerem. Nunc igitur ipsius arche nostre exemplar pro ut foris discas sicut promisimus, ponamus, quod exterius depingimus, intus agere debeas, ut cum huius exemplaris formam in corde tuo expresseris domum Dei in te edificatam, esse leteris." 187. Paris, BnF lat. 14506 (Sicard 2001:45*-46*); 717 Paris, Bib. Mazarine quid
(Sicard 2001:43*); Sicard (1993:50-51). 188. Indiculum, pp. 278-279. 189. This is fully analyzed by Sicard (1993:102-112). 190. Sicard
1993:35, 37, 39, 45, 49-52, 55-59, 64, 101-104, 106, 112; 255*-258*, 271*-277*; 2001b:127, 130). This is apparently the as and taken Carruthers Weiss, position by suggested by the beginning The of the translation of Mystic Ark by Weiss; cf. Carruthers and Weiss (1991:29;
2001:27*,
(2002:45). 56, 58). The idea that The Mystic Ark is a 37,40-41, of the discussion found in The Moral Ark is followed by representation Carruthers and Weiss (2002:41). 192. Cf. Hugh, Moral Ark III, pp. 55-85 and Mystic Ark I, pp. 125-126. 191.
Sicard
(1993:35,
193. Cf. Hugh, Moral Ark I:III, I:V, pp. 17, 31-32. 194. Bynum (1982:25-58, esp. 36-40). 195. Peter of Celle, Ep. 167, PL 202:610. 196. Hugh, Moral Ark 1:111, I.TV, ILVIII, IV.TX, pp. 10, 15, 23, 46, 117. 197. Robert of Torigny, De Immutatione 5, PL 202:1313. 198. Guen?e (1980:255); cited by Sicard (1993:96, n. 56). 199. Ferruolo
(1985:22).
200.
Clanchy (1997:69). Sicard (1993:96, n. 56). 202. Never existed at all: Carruthers 201.
(1992:231-233, 239); Evans (1994), passim, but esp. p. 74; Carruthers Carruthers and Weiss (1998:243-246); (2002: a n. in state: Existed reduced Ehlers 41-42). 43). Rarely (1972:183, only Sicard
(1993:40-41).
or may not have existed: Zinn
(1968: (1986:36). Lecoq (1989:10), Skubiszewski (1990), Wirth (1999:392). Made, but no longer exists: Ohly (1972:100), Zinn (1972:320), Zinn (1992). produced: 136-137),
May
Obrist
203. Manuscript illumination: Ehlers (1972:183, n. 43)
Oudin
(1772:1111), Haur?au (1886:91), a (in reduced state), Friedman (1985:174) 1990:267, n. 11 (who sees this as one possibil (probable), Skubiszewski and cf. Evans (1994:75. n. 14), where he (quite rightly) chastises me ity), and others for thinking of the Ark as amanuscript illumination (cf. my
earlier work, Rudolph 1990:36, n. 24). Manuscript illumination, wall or if it ever existed: Lecoq (1989:10, 21). Wall or floor floor painting, (1988:17). Wall painting or wall-hanging: painting: Gautier Dalch? Zinn
(1992:99,
n. 2). Wall-hanging:
Ohly
(1972:100), Wirth
(1999:386)
98 CENTER POINT
or floor painting: Sicard (1993:46, n. 72, (if it ever existed). Wall-hanging 55). Floor painting: Kupfer (1994:269) (my thanks to Dr. Kupfer for me a of this with article), Sicard (2001b:127). Lost draw copy providing McGinn Existed, but format not discussed: Zinn (1992:v.2:378). ing: (1978:108, (1972:188, 208), Zinn (1972), Esmeijer (1968:137), Bronder n. 51), Sicard (1991:29). Existed only mentally: Carruthers (1992:231-233, and Weiss Carruthers (1998:243-246), 239), Evans (1994), Carruthers sees n. cf. also Skubiszewski this as (1990:267, 11) (who (2002:41-42); 204.
one possibility). Painted in front of audience:
Sicard
1993, passim, but esp. floor painting: Sicard wall-hanging,
(1991:29;
40-50; 2001:8*). Planities, (1993:46, n. 72, 55). Floor painting: (2001b:127). Verbal image: Sicard (1991:29; 1993,passim, but esp. pp. 40-42, 50-51, 54-59, 63, n. Ill;
pp. 34-35,
2001b:129). 205. Hugh, Mystic 206. Hugh, Mystic 207. Hugh, Mystic 208. Hugh, Mystic 209. Hugh, Mystic 210. Hugh, Mystic
Ark II, p. 129. Ark XI, p. 158. Ark XI, p. 158. Ark XI, p. 159.
Ark XI, p. 159. Ark XI, p. 157. Discussed above, pp. 27-28. n. 196 above, which cites largely nonrhetorical references in Moral Ark. The of The Mystic Ark
See also p. 99, to the painting
211. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, p. 123. 212. That Hugh painted the Ark is clear from such repeated statements in The Moral Ark as, "I have depicted" (depinxi), "We ourselves have depicted ... nos "To better show what we this form" (hancformam depinximus), have
said,
we
(ut meliuspateant
have
depicted que
... We
dicimus...
have
also
put
depinximus...
on
the
same
in eodem
side
..."
latere...
);Moral Ark I:III, I:IV, ILVIII, pp. 10, 23, 46. This posuimus. be taken up further inmy forthcoming study of the Ark.
dis
subject will
On the question of what time in the canons' daily schedule the Ark lectures took place, see Sicard (1991:28; 1993:14-20). 214. Hugh, Moral Ark, passim, but most succinctly stated at the outset (Moral Ark 1:1, p. 3).
213.
215.
Convenience: Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, pp. 140-146, 146. Descent: Mystic Ark IV, pp. 146-147. Ascent: Mystic Ark IV, V-VI, pp. 140-141, 147, 148-150, 151.
216. Hugh, Moral Ark I:III, p. 10. Discussed above, pp. 45-46. 217. Lehmann-Brockhaus 1955:v.5:321, "planities," esp. no. 805. 218. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, p. 121. Discussed above, pp. 29-30. Faciem mem branae: Hugh, De tribus maximis, refer to any flat surface except...
p. 490. For the view that planities "can the support for a painting," see Evans
(1994:76). 219.
For the use of the digit as a unit of measurement with the Ark, seeMoral Ark I:IV, pp. 21-22.
by Hugh
in association
NOTES
99
220. My own production of the Ark is around 555.5 cm. (18 ft. 2 in.) high: around the height of the contemporary windows of Suger at Saint-Denis, Iwill discuss the issue which were meant for individual contemplation. of size more
book. fully inmy forthcoming For size estimates by other scholars, see Ehlers (1972:183, n. 43), who estimates the Ark proper only, using a central cubit of 1 cm. This yields an Ark proper of 2 m in length, something he feels would have been too small for the inscriptions. While this might be true for awork of public art, it is case a not the for pedagogical work of art designed for a seminar context. Sicard (1993:55, n. 92) believes that the "Ark" would have been around in height by 1.5m in width, though he does not specify whether he is referring to the Ark proper or to the entire painting of the Ark.
2m
221. Destroyed 1943. Hahn-Woernle 222. Barber (1995:21).
(1993).
(1994). Bronder (1972:188, n. 2) rejects the idea of ekphrasis, such a rejection being implied by Lecoq (1989:10). 224. Hugh, De vanitate 1, pp. 29-36. For a recent study of ekphrasis, to which The Mystic Ark bears no relation but these passages from De vanitate do, see Putnam (1998, passim, but esp. pp. 2-3) for a discussion of the nature
223.
225.
Evans
of ekphrasis. Lifted passages: Bede, De temporum ratione 66, p. 464; Hugh, Moral Ark II:II?III, pp. 36-38; and possibly Isidore, De natura rerum 11, pp. 213-217; cf. Hugh, Mystic Ark II, VIII, XI, pp. 131-132, 153, 157-158. Mundane references to Hugh's other works: Mystic Ark IV, p. 143 (De tribus diebus); VIII, p. 153 (Moral Ark); X, p. 156 (a projected work on the stopping places). Separate section for inscriptions: Mystic Ark IV, pp. 139-140. nature: Mystic Ark XI, p. 158. Abbreviated
226. As a literarily simpler form than ekphrasis: Sicard (1991:29; 1993, passim, but esp. pp. 40-42, 50-51, 54-59, 63 n. Ill; 2001b:129). Skubiszewski n. a one that is mental 11) suggests (1990:267, picture option of the text. Cf. also Zinn
Carruthers (1992:123, 231-239, (1968:137). Memorization: and Carruthers andWeiss (2002:41). On the esp. 233, 234; 1998:243-246) see also Zinn (1974b:229), Lecoq (1989:19), Sicard Ark and memory, 60, n. 102) (where he disagrees with Carruthers that the Ark (1993:27-28, is "purely mental"), Evans (1994:75) (who criticizes Carruthers' thesis that the Ark is based on Ciceronian (2001b:128), 227. Miscellaneous
mnemonic
technique),
Sicard
and cf. Ehlers
(1972:184). elements: Hugh, Mystic Ark VII, pp. 151-152. Inscriptions: Mystic Ark IV, pp. 139-146. Proportions: Mystic Ark I, p. 123. 228. Hugh, Mystic Ark IV, pp. 141-146, passim. 229. Hugh,Mora/ArH:III,p. 10. 230.
Sicard
231.
Quomodopingi see also Sicard
(1993:23,
informal
titles.
54, 96). Cf. Hugh, Moral Ark 1:1,p. 3. debeat, Bruxelles, Bib. roy. 4399-4402 (Sicard 2001:30*); a for of other, similar (2001:256*) partial listing only
100 CENTER POINT
Ark I:III, p. 10, where
232.
See Hugh, Moral
233.
proper work of art. See above, pp. 12-14.
234.
235.
he describes
The Mystic
Ark as a
the text of The Mystic Ark as a "step-by-step" set of instructions: Describing Ehlers (1972:171), Zinn (1972:321), Obrist (1986:36), Sicard (1991:157, n. 219), Sicard (1993:53, n. 86, 55, 57, 58, 66), Evans (1994:74) (although he believes the painting never existed), Kupfer (1994:269), Sicard (2001b: 127). The same basic procedure described in Alexander for man (1992:40-42) to wall would have been the illumination applied uscript painting of The nature of the painting, it seems unlikely Mystic Ark. Given the pedagogical that a fresco technique would have been used. (1999:393) notes that the incorrect artistic (1992:40-41). Wirth text in the of The Mystic Ark suggests that it is not practice described craftsman. described by a professional
236. Alexander
Cf. Hugh, Mystic Ark I, pp. 122-123 (central cubit), 238. Hugh, Moral Ark 1:1,1:III, pp. 3, 10.
237.
126 (central pillar).
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Ohly 1972: Friedrich Ohly, "Die Kathedral als Zeitenraum: Zum Dom von Siena," Fr?hmittelalterliche Studien 6 (1972) 94-158. Oudin 1772: Casimir Oudin, Commentarius de scriptoribus Ecclesiae antiquis, 3 v. (Leipzig 1772). Piazzoni 1982: Ambrogio M. Piazzoni, "Ugo di San Vittore 'auctor' delle 'Sententiae " Studi medievali ser. 3, 23 (1982), 861-911. de divinitate,'
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Poirel 2001: Dominique Poirel, "Symbolice et anagogice: L'?cole de Saint-Victor et la naissance du style gothique," in Poirel (2001b: 141-170). Poirel 2001b: ed. Dominique Poirel, L'abb? Suger, lemanifeste gothique de Saint-Denis et lapens?e victorine, Rencontres m?di?vales europ?ennes 1 (Turnhout 2001). Poirel 2002: Dominique Poirel, Livre de la nature et d?bat trinitaire au Xlle si?cle: Le "De tribus diebus" deHugues de Saint-Victor (Turnhout 2002). 1966: H. P. Pollitt, "Considerations on the Structure and Sources of Hugh of on the Octateuch," Recherches de th?ologie ancienne et m?di?vale 33 (1966), 5-38.
Pollitt
St Victor's Notes Putnam
1998: Michael C. J. Putnam, VirgiVs Epie Designs: Ekphrasis in the Aeneid (New Haven 1998). Rahner 1964: Hugo Rahner, Symbole der Kirche: Die Ekklesiologie der V?ter (Salzburg 1964). Rouse 2000: Richard H. Rouse and Mary A. Rouse, Illiterati et uxorati. Manuscripts and Their Makers: Commercial Book Producers
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2 v.
(Turnhout 2000). Rudolph 1990: Conrad Rudolph, Artistic Change at St-Denis: Abbot Suger's Program and the Early Twelfth-Century Controversy over Art (Princeton 1990). Rudolph 1999: Conrad Rudolph, "In the Beginning: Theories and Images of Cre ation inNorthern Europe in the Twelfth Century," Art History 22 (1999), 3-55. 1933: Wilhelm A. Schneider, Geschichte und Geschichtsphilosophie bei zur von 12. Ein St Victor: des M?nster Jahrhunderts, Hugo Beitrag Geistegeschichte sche Beitr?ge zur Geschichtsforschung 3:2 (Munich 1933).
Schneider
des 1964: J. B. Schneyer, "Erg?nzungen der Sermones und Miscellanea von aus Sankt Viktor verschiedenen Handschriften" Recherches de th?ologie Hugo ancienne et m?di?vale 31 (1964), 260-286.
Schneyer
Sicard 1991: Patrice Sicard, Hugues de Saint-Victor et son ?cole (Turnhout 1991). Sicard 1993: Patrice Sicard, Diagrammes m?di?vaux et ex?g?se visuelle: Le Libellus de formatione arche de Hugues de Saint-Victor (Paris 1993). Sicard 2001: Patrice Sicard, introduction to De archa Noe. Libellus de formatione arche, CCCM 176 (Turnhout 2001) 7*-287*. et ar Sicard 2001b: Patrice Sicard, "L'urbanisme de la Cit? de Dieu: Constructions la Xlle in chitectures dans si?cle," (Poirel 2001b: 109-140). pens?e th?ologique du 1990: Piotr Skubiszewski, "L'intellectuel et l'artiste face ? l'oeuvre ? Le travail au moyen ?ge: Une approche interdisciplinaire, Publi romane," l'?poque 10 (1990), 263-321. cations de l'Institut d'?tudes m?di?vales
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and Other Studies (Oxford 1970), 61-85. 1982: R. W. Southern, "The Schools of Paris and the School of Chartres,"
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"Fils de la vierge: L'initiale Stirnemann, parisienne, 1140-1314," Revue de l'art90 (1990), 58-73. "La production manuscrite 1991: Patricia Stirnemann, Stirnemann
Stirnemann
1990: Patricia
? filagrannes et la biblio
th?que de Saint-Victor 1140-1155," in Long?re (1991:140-141). Taylor 1957: Jerome Taylor, The Origin and Early Life ofHugh of St Victor: An Eval uation of the Tradition, Texts and Studies in the History of Mediaeval Education 5 (Notre Dame, Ind. 1957). Van den Eynde 1960: Damien Van den Eynde, Essai sur la succession et la date des 13 ?crits de Hugues de Saint-Victor, Spicilegium Pontificii Athenaei Antoniani (Rome 1960). "Die Arbeitsmethode 1949: Heinrich Weisweiler, Weisweiler Hugos von St. Viktor: Ein Beitrag zum Entstehen seines Hauptwerkes De sacramentis," Scholastik 20-24 (1949), 59-87, 232-267. Wirth 1999: JeanWirth, L'image ? l'?poque romane (Paris 1999). The Dimensions Zinn 1968: Grover Zinn, "History and Contemplation: on the Ark of Noah
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1972: Grover Zinn, "M?ndala Symbolism and Use in theMysticism of Hugh of 317-341. St. Victor," History of Religions 12 (1972-1973), " est': The Role of History in the 'Historia fundamentum Zinn 1974: Grover Zinn, to of St. Life Victor," Contemporary Reflections According Hugh Contemplative Zinn
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INDEX
Abelard, 48, 57, 69 Andrew of Saint Victor,
forty-two stopping places of the Hebrews, 45-46, 58 four elements, 39
58
1, 23 Augustine, Bede, 23, 25, 76 Bernard of Clairvaux, viii, 8, 25, 48, 53, 57
Garden of Eden, 27, 47-50 Hell, 46-50
19
Bonaventure,
30
closing, 64-65, 68, 70 relation to The Mystic Ark, 34-40,
qualities,
seasons,
5, 67,
stages, three
12-14,
24-26,
28, 72
Winds,
new
27-28,
symbols,
productions,
2-3
painted at Saint Victor, 71-75, 84 painted by others, 75, 77-78, 84
83
temporal-spatial
Evangelists'
19-20,
Zodiac, 28, 40, 56, 72 Isaiah, vision of, 39-40, 50-51
choirs of angels, 48
progression,
periods,
Twelve Apostles, 72 Twelve Months, 18, 28, 40, 72 Twelve Patriarchs, 21, 72
79,80 central pillar, 26-27 79,
14,36,51-55,79
34-37,44,51-53,83
19,21,38,73
37-44,
19, 23-24
tion,
components,
central cubit, 12, 14, 30, 48, 73,
east-west
56
six days of creation, 39
beams, 24, 88 n. 25 belts, bands, 30
cosmos,
39,
seraphim, 39-40, 50-51, 79 six ages of the history of salva
proportions,
18,
27,
72,79
60
51-55,
23, 46, 60, 72, 76, 78 ascents,
16-18,
harmony,
35, 38-39, 44, 49, 55-56, 60,
84-85
proper,
56
quaternary
four Arks, 43, 44, 77 function of the painting, 77-78,
37, 38,
Paradise/Jimbus patrum, 46-50 18 personifications,
exegesis, 3, 19, 21, 28 existence of, 28
iconographical
12, 27-28,
mappa mundi, 44,54
43-44,51,56,64-70,83
24-26,
79
39-42, 49, 50-51,
Majesty,
TheMystic Ark, painting, 19-20,
18
16-17,
Last Judgment, 46-50 line of generation, 14, 24, 45-46, 49
Hugh of Saint-Victor, life, 1 TheMoral Ark, vii, 10, 14, 25, 26-27, 27-28, 29, 50, 55
Ark
12-14,
inscriptions,
Chalcidius, 39 Gilduin of Saint Victor, 60 Honorius Augustodunensis,
color,
46-50
Heaven,
72
18
process
of production,
72-75,
79-80,
22,
83
71,
110
INDEX
Hugh of Saint-Victor
(continued)
of creation
works
and
of
tion, 34, 37, 38, 39, 47, 49, 77 The Mystic Ark, text, cingulus, 29, 30 cornu,
30-31
29,
84
ekphrasis question, 75-76, as a literary work simpler than ekphrasis, 65, 71, 76-77, 84 function of the text, 5-6, 67, 69, limbus, 29, 30 as a memory
aid,
of,
10, 63,
64-66,
70,76 recensions, as a
58-61,
44-61,
reportatio,
as a set of
9-31,
instructions,
63,
83-84
83
63,
67,
78-81,
84-85
supposition of as an appendix to The Moral Ark, 64-70, 84 title of, 65, 66, 70, 76 viewer's zona,
point 29,
30
of
sacramentis,
reference,
11-12
19
25,
11-12,
34,
37,
47,50 11-12
Descriptio mappe mundi, De tribus diebus, 37 De
vanitate
76
mundi,
Dialogus, 52 Didascalicon, 30 29-30,
geometriae,
Sententie de divinitate, 57
84
76-77,
71, 73
29-30, absence
preface,
De
Practica
70,77,78-81,84-85
planities,
Chronicon, 45-46 De contemplatione,
34-35, 57-58, 60-61, 84
chronology,
(other than The Mystic Ark and The Moral Ark)
writings
restora
73
11, 34-35,
Indiculum, 60-61, 65, 66, 67 Isidore of Seville, 17, 27, 76 Laurence ofWestminster, 11, 58, 83 30 Macrobius, Peter of Celle, 68 Robert of Melun, 58 Robert of Torigny, 69 Saint Victor, scriptorium, 83-84 Suger of Saint-Denis, Vitruvius, 30
59-60,
viii, 3, 9
63,