Humanities (Apr 2022)

The Manuscripts of <i>Solomon and Saturn</i>: CCCC 41, CCCC 422, BL Cotton Vitellius A.xv

  • Tiffany Beechy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/h11020052
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 52

Abstract

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Reflecting John D. Niles’ recent codicological reading of the Exeter Book, this essay advances a comparative reading of the three manuscripts containing Old English Solomon and Saturn dialogues. These manuscripts attest that the Solomon and Saturn dialogues were “serious” texts, twice attending the liturgy and later (12th century) joining high pre-scholastic philosophy. They further reveal a shift in the use of poetry over time. The earlier dialogues evince an “Incarnational poetics” that is distinct from but nevertheless comparable to the “monastic poetics” of the Exeter Book, while the later, prose dialogue has taken a less performative and more encyclopedic form.

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