登陆注册
5223500000010

第10章 CHAPTER III--THE RENAISSANCE AND THE REFORMATION(1

We have now arrived at a period in the history of Oxford which is confused and unhappy, but for us full of interest, and perhaps of instruction. The hundred years that passed by between the age of Chaucer and the age of Erasmus were, in Southern Europe, years of the most eager life. We hear very often--too often, perhaps--of what is called the Renaissance. The energy of delight with which Italy welcomed the new birth of art, of literature, of human freedom, has been made familiar to every reader. It is not with Italy, but with England and with Oxford, that we are concerned. How did the University and the colleges prosper in that strenuous time when the world ran after loveliness of form and colour, as, in other ages, it has run after warlike renown, or the far-off rewards of the saintly life? What was Oxford doing when Florence, Venice, and Rome were striving towards no meaner goal than perfection?

It must be said that "the spring came slowly up this way." The University merely reflected the very practical character of the people. In contemplating the events of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, in their influence on English civilisation, we are reminded once more of the futility of certain modern aspirations. No amount of University Commissions, nor of well-meant reforms, will change the nature of Englishmen. It is impossible, by distributions of University prizes and professorships, to attract into the career of letters that proportion of industry and ingenuity which, in Germany for example, is devoted to the scholastic life. Politics, trade, law, sport, religion, will claim their own in England, just as they did at the Revival of Letters. The illustrious century which Italy employed in unburying, appropriating, and enjoying the treasures of Greek literature and art, our fathers gave, in England, to dynastic and constitutional squabbles, and to religious broils.

The Renaissance in England, and chiefly in Oxford, was like a bitter and changeful spring. There was an hour of genial warmth, there breathed a wind from the south, in the lifetime of Chaucer; then came frosts and storms; again the brief sunshine of court favour shone on literature for a while, when Henry VIII. encouraged study, and Wolsey and Fox founded Christ Church and Corpus Christi College; once more the bad days of religious strife returned, and the promise of learning was destroyed. Thus the chief result of the awakening thought of the fourteenth century in England was not a lively delight in literature, but the appearance of the Lollards. The intensely practical genius of our race turned not to letters, but to questions about the soul and its future, about property and its distribution.

The Lollards were put down in Oxford; "the tares were weeded out" by the House of Lancaster, and in the process the germs of free thought, of originality, and of a rational education, were destroyed.

"Wyclevism did domineer among us," says Wood; and, in fact, the intellect of the University was absorbed, like the intellect of France during the heat of the Jansenist controversy, in defending or assailing "267 damned conclusions," drawn from the books of Wyclif.

The University "lost many of her children through the profession of Wyclevism." Those who remained were often "beneficed clerks." The Friars lifted up their heads again, and Oxford was becoming a large ecclesiastical school. As the University declared to Archbishop Chichele (1438), "Our noble mother, that was blessed in so goodly an offspring, is all but utterly destroyed and desolate." Presently the foreign wars and the wars of the Roses drained the University of the youth of England. The country was overrun with hostile forces, or infested by disbanded soldiers. Plague and war, war and plague, and confusion, alternate in the annals. Sickly as Oxford is to-day by climate and situation, she is a city of health compared to what she was in the middle ages. In 1448 "a pestilence broke out, occasioned by the overflowing of waters, . . . also by the lying of many scholars in one room or dormitory in almost every Hall, which occasioned nasty air and smells, and consequently diseases." In the general dulness and squalor two things were remarkable: one, the last splendour of the feudal time; the other, the first dawn of the new learning from Italy. In 1452, George Neville of Balliol, brother of the King-maker, gave the most prodigious pass-supper that was ever served in Oxford. On the first day there were 600 messes of meat, divided into three courses. The second course is worthy of the attention of the epicure:

SECOND COURSE

Vian in brase. Carcell.

Crane in sawce. Partrych.

Young Pocock. Venson baked.

Coney. Fryed meat in paste.

Pigeons. Lesh Lumbert.

Byttor. A Frutor.

Curlew. A Sutteltee.

Against this prodigious gormandising we must set that noble gift, the Library presented to Oxford by Duke Humfrey of Gloucester. In the Catalogue, drawn up in 1439, we mark many books of the utmost value to the impoverished students. Here are the works of Plato, and the Ethics and Politics of Aristotle, translated by Leonard the Aretine.

Here, among the numerous writings of the Fathers, are Tully and Seneca, Averroes and Avicenna, Bellum Trojae cum secretis secretorum, Apuleius, Aulus Gellius, Livy, Boccaccio, Petrarch. Here, with Ovid's verses, is the Commentary on Dante, and his Divine Comedy.

Here, rarest of all, is a Greek Dictionary, the silent father of Liddel's and Scott's to be.

同类推荐
  • 士虞礼

    士虞礼

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孔雀王咒经

    孔雀王咒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Inn of Tranquility and Others

    The Inn of Tranquility and Others

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 戒杀四十八问

    戒杀四十八问

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 九歌

    九歌

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 越颜倾国妃:宛姬吟

    越颜倾国妃:宛姬吟

    【原创作者社团『未央』出品】一个普普通通的十七岁网络写手宛和,在完结自己小说的那天,被一个奇怪的老妪带到一个奇怪的地方,告诉了她那些只可能发生在小说情节里的故事。她就这样被迫穿越了,而且是穿到自己的小说里,演绎着那些已经变成文字的故事。从此,宛和由一个成天幻想的写手变成了主角,情伤、复仇、悲恸、死亡、堕落、轮回,每一件事,每一次经历都是她脑海里的记忆,都是她已经发表的小说里的情节。可是,从她穿回来的那一刻起,命运轮盘又开始转动,她记得的那些,都已经成了过去式,她只能顶着一个自认为不属于自己的身份,南蛮王妃,在神魔中小心游移……ps:若是本文到了可以入V的时候,玖玖会入的,请亲们淡定……
  • 扫除成长心理障碍(培养学生心灵成长的经典故事)

    扫除成长心理障碍(培养学生心灵成长的经典故事)

    在这套丛书里,我们针对青少年的心理特点,专门选择了一些特殊的故事,分别对他们在这一时期将会遭遇的情感问题、生活问题、学习问题、交友问题以及各种心理健康问题,从心理学的角度进行剖析和讲解,并提出了解决问题的方法和措施,以供同学们参考借鉴。
  • 浑身痒痒

    浑身痒痒

    进入腊月,老更也进入了临战状态,小儿子惠临腊月初九就要结婚了,想想,还有许多事等着他去做。昨天媒人捎过话来,说过红的时候,给女方家送的离娘肉要大一点,别只割了一小绺,猪尾巴似的,让人瞧不起。媒人还说,倒不是女孩的爹娘想多吃您家二斤猪肉,主要表示对女方家的尊重。老更说:那是自然的,我家虽不富裕,不过夹夹缩缩的事我还是不做。老更的话说得很有底气,事实上老更也真不是小气的人,大事小事老更也是办过几件的,比如养老送终娶媳盖房,在牛家铺子,真没给别人留下可以咀嚼长短的口舌。
  • 嫡女求生指南

    嫡女求生指南

    凤宁兮穿越啦!西北候家的女儿,爹娘尚在,祖母疼爱,关键:她嫡出!不是庶女逆袭,没有生母早逝,低调开启嫡女外挂种田模式的凤宁兮表示:她简直苏的一逼!但好日子没过两个月,凤宁兮突然发现:亲爹纨绔,行动洁宝不怀疑,祖母疼爱,拿当她傻瓜对待,亲娘不得宠,商人出身合府鄙视……西北候府三,四百人,全靠亲娘的嫁妆养活!这就算了,好歹面子上还能看,可面对亲娘的情人。凤宁兮几乎崩溃:娘,咱有点技术含量好不好?找情人你找个太监是什么意思啊!宠妾宠的灭妻灭女的亲爹,愤而和离改嫁太监的亲娘,凤宁兮表示:这日子还能不能过?不能过就都别过了,亲爹,你敢灭女!我就——我就随娘改嫁!
  • 写像秘诀

    写像秘诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 北固清怀

    北固清怀

    我出生在晋北的一个小山村,至今仍然说着浓重的乡音,经常梦到儿时的伙伴和那些春播秋收的往事。这里土地贫瘠,没有什么资源,但是祖祖辈辈的人们辛勤劳作,忙碌着那仅够维持温饱的希望,日复一日,年复一年。很多时候,他们活的是一种精神。我知道自己愚笨迟钝,所以做啥工作都认真、执着;我喜欢读书,工作之余,把大量的时间用在读书写作上,如同我们那里的土地一样,即使下百倍千倍的努力,收获依然十分有限,但是我心甘情愿,起早贪黑,日复一日,年复一年。很多时候,我活的是一种信念。
  • 豪门隐婚:旧妻新爱

    豪门隐婚:旧妻新爱

    “宋黎,你觉得这样有意思吗?”秦万卓一手撕掉手中的离婚协议书。宋黎斜睨了他一眼,“婚姻法规定,过错方可少分或者不分财产。况且,我们分居有两年了吧?”“所以……”秦万卓坏笑,“我们是不是该履行夫妻义务了?”
  • 古今医彻

    古今医彻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 王爷,想入妃妃

    王爷,想入妃妃

    姜琬琰从来没有想过自己会走上和亲的这条道路。更没想过自己会嫁给这个酒肉之徒敬王爷。可是她嫁了!苏穆清从来没有想过自己会变成政治利益牺牲品。更没想过自己会娶一个富甲一方的长公主。可是他娶了!
  • Anecdotes of the late Samuel Johnson

    Anecdotes of the late Samuel Johnson

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。