The Southern Version of CURSOR MUND1 Volume V the Southern Version of CURSOR MUNDI General Editor, Sarah M

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Southern Version of CURSOR MUND1 Volume V the Southern Version of CURSOR MUNDI General Editor, Sarah M tHe Southern Version of CURSOR MUND1 Volume V The Southern Version of CURSOR MUNDI General Editor, Sarah M. Horrall Previously published Volume I. Lines 1-9228. Edited by Sarah M. Horrall Volume II. Lines 9229-12712. Edited by Roger R. Fowler Volume III. Lines 12713-17082. Edited by Henry J. Stauffenberg Volume IV. Lines 17289-21346. Edited by Peter H. J. Mous The Southern Version of CURSOR MUND1 Volume V Lines 21845-23898 Edited by Laurence M, Eldredge and Anne L. Klinck General Editor ^arah M. Horrall University of Ottawa Press University of Ottawa Press gratefully acknowledges the support extended to its publishing programme by the Canada Council and the University of Ottawa. We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program for this project. This book has been published with the help of a grant from the Humanities and Social Sciences Federation of Canada, using funds provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. University of Ottawa Press gratefully acknowledges the support of the Univer- sity of New Brunswick and the long-standing support and generous commit- ment of the Faculty of Arts of the University of Ottawa to this project. Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data Cursor mundi The Southern version of Cursor mundi (Etudes medievales de 1'Universite d'Ottawa — Ottawa mediaeval texts and studies) Includes bibliographies. Vol. 1 is no. 5 of series, v. 2 is no. 16, v. 3 is no. 13, v. 4 is no. 14, and v. 5 is unnumbered. Vol. 2 edited by Roger R. Fowler, v. 5 edited by Laurence M. Eldredge and Anne L. Klinck. Contents: v. 1. Lines 1-9228 - v. 2. Lines 9229-12712 - v. 3. Lines 12713-17082 - v. 4. Lines 17289-21346 - v. 5. Lines 21845-23898. ISBN 0-7766-4805-5 (v. 1) - ISBN 0-7766-0206-3 (v. 2) - ISBN 0-7766-4814-4 (v. 3) - ISBN 0-7766-0107-5 (v. 4) - ISBN 0-7766-0504-6 (v. 5) I. Eldredge, L. M., 1931- II. Fowler, Roger R., 1944- III. Horrall, Sarah M., 1940-1988 IV. Klinck, Anne Lingard, 1943- V Title. VI. Series: Publications medievales de 1'Universite d'Ottawa; 5, 16,13, 14. PR1966.A35 2000 821'.1 C79-002580-9 rev. UNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA UNIVERSITE D'OTTAWA Cover Design: Robert Dolbec "All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmit- ted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photo- copy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without per- mission in writing from the publisher." ISBN 0-7766-0504-6 © University of Ottawa Press, 2000 542 King Edward, Ottawa, Ont., Canada KIN 6N5 [email protected] http://www.uopress.uottawa.ca Printed and bound in Canada In memory of Alphonsus P. Campbell (1912-1983) and Sarah M. Horrall (1940-1988) This page intentionally left blank TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface IX Introduction to This Volume 1 List of Manuscript Sigla 1 Structure of This Section 1 Editorial Principles 2 General Introduction 3 Sources 3 Genre 8 Structure 11 Date, Provenance, and Authorship 13 Ownership and History of the Manuscripts 18 Decoration 24 Influence 35 Manuscript Relations 42 Abbreviations 51 Text of the Southern Version of Cursor Mundi. Lines 21845-23898 53 Textual Notes 101 Explanatory Notes 109 Appendices A. Errors in Morris' Texts 121 B. MS B, 11. 22005-23898 (Pricke of Conscience, 11. 4085-6417) 143 C. The Finding of the True Cross (11. 21347-21846) 187 D. Mary's Lament and the Establishment of the Feast of the Immaculate Conception (11. 23909-24968) 191 Bibliography 199 Glossary 205 Index of Persons and Places 265 This page intentionally left blank PREFACE In undertaking to complete the work left unfinished by our late col- league, Dr. Sarah M. Horrall, we have been conscious of the high schol- arly standards she set for herself and her collaborators. In her absence we have tried to set and observe comparable standards for ourselves. As we divided the editorial tasks between us, primary responsibility for work on the manuscripts was undertaken by L.M.E.; the Glossary and Index were prepared by A.L.K.; the revisions to Dr. Horrall's drafts were undertaken jointly. On her death in 1988 Dr. Horrall left drafts of the Introduction, the Text itself, the Explanatory Notes, and Appendices C, on the Finding of the True Cross, and D, on the Legend of the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. Our general principle has been to allow as much of her work as possible to stand without amendment, changing only those bits where additional scholarship made updating necessary and the few places where error had uncharacteristically crept in. We have also tried to maintain the unspoken editorial assumptions that have informed both the earlier volumes of this edition and the drafts that Dr. Horrall left when she died. Specifically, the General Introduction is almost wholly as Dr. Hor- rall left it, our contribution being to reconstruct the stemma according to her account of the manuscripts, to fill in missing line numbers, and to supply the bibliographical details. Likewise the text of MS H is very nearly as Dr. Horrall left it, we having supplied only the portions taken from MS T where H was defective. Of course we verified her readings of H against the manuscript and have made one or two minor changes. Having found no draft of the Textual Notes, we have added these. The Explanatory Notes to the Text here edited, lines 21845- 23898, as well as those in Appendices C and D, have been thoroughly X THE SOUTHERN VERSION OF CURSOR MUNDI checked and brought up to date with current scholarship, but essentially they represent notes on lines that Dr. Horrall thought deserving of anno- tation. Since earlier volumes in this edition have contained an appendix with corrections of Morris' readings of the manuscripts in his edition and another appendix, where necessary, giving the portions of B that follow the text of the Pricke of Conscience rather than that of Cursor Mundi, we have maintained consistency with our Appendices A and B. Had Dr. Horrall lived to see this final volume through the press, we have no doubt that it would have appeared in the early 1990's. In the event, our later arrival on the editorial scene has delayed publication until, ironically enough, scholarly progress has in some instances over- taken the assumptions on which this edition is based. Recent work in codicology and early book production, perhaps best exemplified in this instance by John J. Thompson, The Cursor Mundi: Poem, Texts and Contexts, has questioned the notion of an authorial final text mutilated by a succession of wretched scribes. In its place Thompson has pro- posed a more amorphous and difficult manner in which the poem might have been compiled, with drafts of early versions cobbled together, revised, augmented, edited, and so forth—thus challenging signifi- cantly the place of the southern version of Cursor Mundi in the poem's textual history. Ironically again, Dr. Horrall was during her lifetime at the fore- front of codicology studies, having cofounded, with Professor Martha Driver of Pace University, the Early Book Society. Had she found her- self at this juncture in the editorial process and at this date, later than envisaged, we do not doubt that her work would have reflected fully all the advances that have been made. As it is, however, we are the ones charged with seeing her work through to completion, and we do not think it possible or just for us to formulate a more recent editorial posi- tion on her behalf. What follows is, as far as we can determine, what Dr. Horrall wanted to say about Cursor Mundi in 1988. Of course, in a work of this magnitude one consults many people along the way for help. In gathering together all that Dr. Horrall left, we are especially grateful to her widower, Stanley Horrall, for allowing us unlimited access to all Dr. Horrall's drafts, and to the subeditors of pre- vious volumes: Roger Fowler, Henry Stauffenberg, and Peter Mouss. THE SOUTHERN VERSION OF CURSOR MUNDI XI We have also relied upon the advice of colleagues and friends, espe- cially J.P.S. Ferguson, Tony Hunt, George Keiser, C.W. Marx, Douglas Moffat, Jean-Pascal Pouzet, Glyn Redworth, William Schipper, Rich- ard Spacek, Mary Swan, and R.C. Yorke. We have taken their advice where we could, ignored it when we thought we had to, and take full responsibility for the errors that may remain in our work. Publication of this book has been made possible by support from the Universities of New Brunswick and Ottawa, and by a grant from the Humanities and Social Sciences Federation of Canada, using funds provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. L.M.E. Oxford, 1999 A.L.K. Fredericton, N.B., 1999 This page intentionally left blank INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME LIST OF MANUSCRIPT SIGLA H Arundel LVII, College of Arms, London T Trinity College, Cambridge, R.3.8 L Laud Misc. 416, Bodleian Library, Oxford B Additional 36983, British Library, London C Cotton Vespasian A iii, British Library, London F Fairfax 14, Bodleian Library, Oxford G Gottingen University theol. 107r E Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh Add Additional 31042, British Library, London STRUCTURE OF THIS SECTION (TITLES TAKEN FROM MORRIS' EDITION) 21847-23898 The Sixth Age of the World; the Day of Doom 21975-22426 Of Antichrist 22427-22710 The Fifteen Signs that Shall come before Doomsday 22711-23194 What Shall Happen on Doomsday 23195-23350 Description of Hell and its Nine Pains 23351-23652 Heaven and the Seven Gifts of the Blessed 23653-23704 The State of the World after Doomsday 23705-23898 The Author's Exhortation to his Fellow Men 2 THE SOUTHERN VERSION OF CURSOR MUNDI EDITORIAL PRINCIPLES The sources for this volume are those listed in the Abbreviations and in the Explanatory Notes.
Recommended publications
  • Annual Report
    COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS ANNUAL REPORT July 1,1996-June 30,1997 Main Office Washington Office The Harold Pratt House 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. 58 East 68th Street, New York, NY 10021 Washington, DC 20036 Tel. (212) 434-9400; Fax (212) 861-1789 Tel. (202) 518-3400; Fax (202) 986-2984 Website www. foreignrela tions. org e-mail publicaffairs@email. cfr. org OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS, 1997-98 Officers Directors Charlayne Hunter-Gault Peter G. Peterson Term Expiring 1998 Frank Savage* Chairman of the Board Peggy Dulany Laura D'Andrea Tyson Maurice R. Greenberg Robert F Erburu Leslie H. Gelb Vice Chairman Karen Elliott House ex officio Leslie H. Gelb Joshua Lederberg President Vincent A. Mai Honorary Officers Michael P Peters Garrick Utley and Directors Emeriti Senior Vice President Term Expiring 1999 Douglas Dillon and Chief Operating Officer Carla A. Hills Caryl R Haskins Alton Frye Robert D. Hormats Grayson Kirk Senior Vice President William J. McDonough Charles McC. Mathias, Jr. Paula J. Dobriansky Theodore C. Sorensen James A. Perkins Vice President, Washington Program George Soros David Rockefeller Gary C. Hufbauer Paul A. Volcker Honorary Chairman Vice President, Director of Studies Robert A. Scalapino Term Expiring 2000 David Kellogg Cyrus R. Vance Jessica R Einhorn Vice President, Communications Glenn E. Watts and Corporate Affairs Louis V Gerstner, Jr. Abraham F. Lowenthal Hanna Holborn Gray Vice President and Maurice R. Greenberg Deputy National Director George J. Mitchell Janice L. Murray Warren B. Rudman Vice President and Treasurer Term Expiring 2001 Karen M. Sughrue Lee Cullum Vice President, Programs Mario L. Baeza and Media Projects Thomas R.
    [Show full text]
  • Handel's Oratorios and the Culture of Sentiment By
    Virtue Rewarded: Handel’s Oratorios and the Culture of Sentiment by Jonathan Rhodes Lee A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the Requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Music in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Davitt Moroney, Chair Professor Mary Ann Smart Professor Emeritus John H. Roberts Professor George Haggerty, UC Riverside Professor Kevis Goodman Fall 2013 Virtue Rewarded: Handel’s Oratorios and the Culture of Sentiment Copyright 2013 by Jonathan Rhodes Lee ABSTRACT Virtue Rewarded: Handel’s Oratorios and the Culture of Sentiment by Jonathan Rhodes Lee Doctor of Philosophy in Music University of California, Berkeley Professor Davitt Moroney, Chair Throughout the 1740s and early 1750s, Handel produced a dozen dramatic oratorios. These works and the people involved in their creation were part of a widespread culture of sentiment. This term encompasses the philosophers who praised an innate “moral sense,” the novelists who aimed to train morality by reducing audiences to tears, and the playwrights who sought (as Colley Cibber put it) to promote “the Interest and Honour of Virtue.” The oratorio, with its English libretti, moralizing lessons, and music that exerted profound effects on the sensibility of the British public, was the ideal vehicle for writers of sentimental persuasions. My dissertation explores how the pervasive sentimentalism in England, reaching first maturity right when Handel committed himself to the oratorio, influenced his last masterpieces as much as it did other artistic products of the mid- eighteenth century. When searching for relationships between music and sentimentalism, historians have logically started with literary influences, from direct transferences, such as operatic settings of Samuel Richardson’s Pamela, to indirect ones, such as the model that the Pamela character served for the Ninas, Cecchinas, and other garden girls of late eighteenth-century opera.
    [Show full text]
  • Manasseh: Reflections on Tribe, Territory and Text
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Vanderbilt Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive MANASSEH: REFLECTIONS ON TRIBE, TERRITORY AND TEXT By Ellen Renee Lerner Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Vanderbilt University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in Religion August, 2014 Nashville, Tennessee Approved: Professor Douglas A. Knight Professor Jack M. Sasson Professor Annalisa Azzoni Professor Herbert Marbury Professor Tom D. Dillehay Copyright © 2014 by Ellen Renee Lerner All Rights Reserved ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS There are many people I would like to thank for their role in helping me complete this project. First and foremost I would like to express my deepest gratitude to the members of my dissertation committee: Professor Douglas A. Knight, Professor Jack M. Sasson, Professor Annalisa Azzoni, Professor Herbert Marbury, and Professor Tom Dillehay. It has been a true privilege to work with them and I hope to one day emulate their erudition and the kind, generous manner in which they support their students. I would especially like to thank Douglas Knight for his mentorship, encouragement and humor throughout this dissertation and my time at Vanderbilt, and Annalisa Azzoni for her incredible, fabulous kindness and for being a sounding board for so many things. I have been lucky to have had a number of smart, thoughtful colleagues in Vanderbilt’s greater Graduate Dept. of Religion but I must give an extra special thanks to Linzie Treadway and Daniel Fisher -- two people whose friendship and wit means more to me than they know.
    [Show full text]
  • Anatomy of Melancholy by Democritus Junior
    THE ANATOMY OF MELANCHOLY WHAT IT IS WITH ALL THE KINDS, CAUSES, SYMPTOMS, PROGNOSTICS, AND SEVERAL CURES OF IT IN THREE PARTITIONS; WITH THEIR SEVERAL SECTIONS, MEMBERS, AND SUBSECTIONS, PHILOSOPHICALLY, MEDICINALLY, HISTORICALLY OPENED AND CUT UP BY DEMOCRITUS JUNIOR [ROBERT BURTON] WITH A SATIRICAL PREFACE, CONDUCING TO THE FOLLOWING DISCOURSE PART 2 – The Cure of Melancholy Published by the Ex-classics Project, 2009 http://www.exclassics.com Public Domain CONTENTS THE SYNOPSIS OF THE SECOND PARTITION............................................................... 4 THE SECOND PARTITION. THE CURE OF MELANCHOLY. .............................................. 13 THE FIRST SECTION, MEMBER, SUBSECTION. Unlawful Cures rejected.......................... 13 MEMB. II. Lawful Cures, first from God. .................................................................................... 16 MEMB. III. Whether it be lawful to seek to Saints for Aid in this Disease. ................................ 18 MEMB. IV. SUBSECT. I.--Physician, Patient, Physic. ............................................................... 21 SUBSECT. II.--Concerning the Patient........................................................................................ 23 SUBSECT. III.--Concerning Physic............................................................................................. 26 SECT. II. MEMB. I....................................................................................................................... 27 SUBSECT. I.--Diet rectified in substance...................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • King Arthur and the Round Table Movie
    King Arthur And The Round Table Movie Keene is alee semestral after tolerable Price estopped his thegn numerically. Antirust Regan never equalises so virtuously or outflew any treads tongue-in-cheek. Dative Dennis instilling some tabarets after indwelling Henderson counterlights large. Everyone who joins must also sign or rent. Your britannica newsletter for arthur movies have in hollywood for a round table, you find the kings and the less good. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Why has been chosen to find this table are not return from catholic wedding to. The king that, once and possess it lacks in modern telling us an enchanted lands. Get in and arthur movie screen from douglas in? There that lancelot has an exchange is eaten by a hit at britons, merlin argues against mordred accused of king arthur and the round table, years of the round tabletop has continued to. Cast: Sean Connery, Ben Cross, Liam Cunningham, Richard Gere, Julia Ormond, and Christopher Villiers. The original site you gonna remake this is one is king arthur marries her mother comes upon whom he and king arthur the movie on? British nobles defending their affection from the Saxon migration after the legions have retreated back to mainland Europe. Little faith as with our other important characters and king arthur, it have the powerful magic garden, his life by. The morning was directed by Joshua Logan. He and arthur, chivalry to strike a knife around romance novels and fireballs at a court in a last tellers of the ends of his. The Quest Elements in the Films of John Boorman.
    [Show full text]
  • Ebook Download Keeper of the Grail Pdf Free Download
    KEEPER OF THE GRAIL PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Michael Spradlin | 248 pages | 17 Sep 2009 | Puffin Books | 9780142414613 | English | New York, NY, United States KEEPER OF GRAIL ( YOUNGEST TEMPLAR, BOOK 1) By Michael Spradlin **Excellent** | eBay Anfortas is the Grail King. The information from the following family trees was obtained using sources from the tales of the Vulgate Cycle and Post Vulgate Cycle. Perceval was now seen as the son of King Pellinor. See House of Lancelot and the Fisher King. Galahad replaced the earlier hero, Perceval , and the content took on more spiritual meaning, with more Christian motifs and symbolism than ever before. Not only did we have a new hero, but all the adventures were also different. See Early Tradition , for the family trees of Perceval. Perceval was now the son of King Pellinor. See the previous family tree, titled the House of Pellinor. This family tree provided a more detail than the Post-Vulgate family tree. I have fully listed all the ancestors of Lancelot and the House of Grail Keeper, all the way to the time of Joseph of Arimathea. Well, as full as can get. The legend claimed that Lancelot and Galahad are descendants of King David, but no medieval writers gave a list of names that go back that far in time. While the line of King Pelles goes back all the way to the sister of Joseph of Arimathea. As to the line of Joseph himself, he can claim descendants like King Urien and his son, Yvain. Nascien was contemporary of Joseph. Both lines can be found in the Vulgate work called The History of the Grail.
    [Show full text]
  • Josephus Writings Outline
    THE WARS OF THE JEWS OR THE HISTORY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM – BOOK I CONTAINING FROM THE TAKING OF JERUSALEM BY ANTIOCHUS EPIPHANES TO THE DEATH OF HEROD THE GREAT. (THE INTERVAL OF 177 YEARS) CHAPTER 1: HOW THE CITY JERUSALEM WAS TAKEN, AND THE TEMPLE PILLAGED [BY ANTIOCHUS EPIPHANES]; AS ALSO CONCERNING THE ACTIONS OF THE MACCABEES, MATTHIAS AND JUDAS; AND CONCERNING THE DEATH OF JUDAS. CHAPTER 2: CONCERNING THE SUCCESSORS OF JUDAS; WHO WERE JONATHAN AND SIMON, AND JOHN HYRCANUS? CHAPTER 3: HOW ARISTOBULUS WAS THE FIRST THAT PUT A DIADEM ABOUT HIS HEAD; AND AFTER HE HAD PUT HIS MOTHER AND BROTHER TO DEATH, DIED HIMSELF, WHEN HE HAD REIGNED NO MORE THAN A YEAR. CHAPTER 4: WHAT ACTIONS WERE DONE BY ALEXANDER JANNEUS, WHO REIGNED TWENTY- SEVEN YEARS. CHAPTER 5: ALEXANDRA REIGNS NINE YEARS, DURING WHICH TIME THE PHARISEES WERE THE REAL RULERS OF THE NATION. CHAPTER 6: WHEN HYRCANUS WHO WAS ALEXANDER'S HEIR, RECEDED FROM HIS CLAIM TO THE CROWN ARISTOBULUS IS MADE KING; AND AFTERWARD THE SAME HYRCANUS BY THE MEANS OF ANTIPATER; IS BROUGHT BACK BY ABETAS. AT LAST POMPEY IS MADE THE ARBITRATOR OF THE DISPUTE BETWEEN THE BROTHERS. CHAPTER 7: HOW POMPEY HAD THE CITY OF JERUSALEM DELIVERED UP TO HIM BUT TOOK THE TEMPLE BY FORCE. HOW HE WENT INTO THE HOLY OF HOLIES; AS ALSO WHAT WERE HIS OTHER EXPLOITS IN JUDEA. CHAPTER 8: ALEXANDER, THE SON OF ARISTOBULUS, WHO RAN AWAY FROM POMPEY, MAKES AN EXPEDITION AGAINST HYRCANUS; BUT BEING OVERCOME BY GABINIUS HE DELIVERS UP THE FORTRESSES TO HIM.
    [Show full text]
  • BIBLICAL GENEALOGIES Adam → Seth
    BIBLICAL GENEALOGIES Adam → Seth → Enosh → Kenan → Mahalalel → Jared→ Enoch → Methuselah → Lamech → Noah (70 descendants to repopulate the earth after the flood – Gen. 10: 1- 32; 1 Chr. 1: 1-27; sons, grandsons, great grandsons): 1 2 The sons of Kenaz (1 Chr. 1: 36) joined the Jews by the tribe of Judah. His descendant was Jephunneh the Kenizzite, who begot Caleb (Num. 32: 12; Josh. 14: 6; 14; 1 Chr. 4: 13-15). Amalek was the father of the Amalekites. Descendants of Jacob (Gen. 46: 26-27) who came to Egypt: • From Reuben: Hanoch, Pallu, Hezron and Carmi. • From Simeon: Jemuel, Jamin, Ohad, Jakin, Zohar and Shaul (son of a Canaanite woman). • From Levi: Gershon, Kohath and Merari. • From Judah: Er ( in Canaan), Onan ( in Canaan), Shelah, Perez and Zerah; From Perez: Hezron and Hamul. • From Issachar: Tola, Puah (or Puvah, Masoretic text), Jashub (or Iob, Masoretic text) and Shimron. • From Zebulun: Sered, Elon and Jahleel. • Dinah (they were all sons of Leah , who had died in Canaan – Gen. 49: 31); total of 33 people (including Jacob). • From Gad: Zephon (Septuagint and Samaritan Pentateuch or Ziphion in Masoretic text), Haggi, Shuni, Ezbom, Eri, Arodi and Areli • From Asher: Imnah, Ishvah, Ishvi, Beriah and Serah (their sister). Beriah begat Heber and Malkiel (they were all sons of Zilpah , Leah’s maidservant); total of 16 people. • From Joseph: Manasseh and Ephraim. • From Benjamin: Bela, Beker, Ashbel, Gera, Naaman, Ehi, Rosh, Muppim, Huppim and Ard. They were all sons of Rachel , who had already died in Canaan – Gen. 35: 19), a total of 14 people.
    [Show full text]
  • Justification and Variegated Nomism. Volume II. the Paradoxes of Paul
    Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament Herausgegeben von Jörg Frey Mitherausgeber / Associate Editors Friedrich Avemarie • Judith Gundry-Volf Martin Hengel • Otfried Hofius • Hans-Josef Klauck 181 Justification and Variegated Nomism Volume II The Paradoxes of Paul edited by D. A. Carson, Peter T. O'Brien, and Mark A. Seifrid Mohr Siebeck • Tübingen Baker Academic • Grand Rapids Distributors For the United States and Canada for Europe Baker Academic Mohr Siebeck P.O. Box 6287 Wilhelmstrasse 18, Postfach 2040 Grand Rapids, Michigan 49516-6287 72010 Tübingen USA Germany All other countries are served by both publishers. ISBN 3-16-148400-2 ISSN 0512-1604 (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament) Die Deutsche Bibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliographie; detailed bibliographic data is available in the Internet at http://dnb.ddb.de. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. ISBN 0-8010-2741-1 © 2004 by Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen, Germany. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, in any form (beyond that permitted by copyright law) without the publisher's written permission. This applies particularly to reproductions, translations, microfilms and storage and processing in electronic systems. @ Printed in Germany on non-aging paper. ISSN 0340-9570 Preface This is the second and final volume of Justification and Variegated Nomism. The first volume, under the subtitle The Complexities of Second Temple Judaism, was published in 2001. Together the two volumes attempt a competent evaluation of the multifaceted movement now commonly known as "the new perspective on Paul." Because much of the new perspective depends to a greater or lesser extent on the reading of the literature of Second Temple Judaism ably articulated by E.
    [Show full text]
  • Selected Vocal Repertoire
    Selected Vocal Repertoire * = premiered by Barbara Hannigan van der Aa Here (to be found) * Here (in circles) * One * Abrahamsen let me tell you* Andriessen Four Beatles Songs Writing to Vermeer (Saskia) * Aperghis de la nature de la gravité de la nature de l’eau * Ayres In the Alps* J.S. Bach B minor mass Coffee Cantata (Lieschen) Hunt Cantata (Diana) Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen (Cantata 51) Johannes Passion Lutheran Mass Magnificat Matthäus Passion Peasant Cantata C.P.E. Bach Passion de Lezten Leidens Barry Karlheinz Stockhausen * La Plus Forte (Madame X) * The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (Gabrielle) The Importance of Being Earnest (Cecily Cardew) Beckwith Synthetic Trios Benjamin Written on Skin (Agnes)* Berg Der Wein Lulu (title role) Sieben Frühe Lieder Wozzeck fragments for soprano and orchestra Berio Sequenza 3 Sinfonia Binsbergen Sidenote: Howard Report* Boccherini Stabat Mater Boulez Le visage nuptial Pli selon pli Britten Les Illuminations The Rape of Lucretia (Lucia) Carissimi Jephtha (Jephtha’s daughter) Castiglione Cantus Planus Cavalli Giasone (Amore, Alinda) Charpentier Actéon (Arethuze) Chin Le silence des sirènes * Clerambault L’amour piqué par une abeille Crumb Apparition Dallapiccola Cinque frammenti di Saffo Debussy La Damoiselle Elue Defoort House of the Sleeping Beauties (The Women) * Dusapin Passion (Lei)* To God Dutilleux Correspondances Eötvös Octet Plus * Snatches of a Conversation Foss Time Cycle Francesconi Etymo Gluck Orfeo ed Eurydice (Amor) Grisey Quatre chants pour franchir le seuil Gubaidulina Hommage
    [Show full text]
  • The Internal Consistency and Historical Reliability of the Biblical Genealogies
    Vetus Testamentum XL, 2 (1990) THE INTERNAL CONSISTENCY AND HISTORICAL RELIABILITY OF THE BIBLICAL GENEALOGIES by GARY A. RENDSBURG Ithaca, New York The general trend among scholars in recent years has been to treat the genealogies recorded in the Bible with an increased skep- ticism. Whereas past generations of scholars may have been ready to affirm the trustworthiness of at least some of the Israelite lineages, current research in this area has led to the opposite con- clusion. Provided with parallels both from ancient Near Eastern documents and from the sociological and anthropological study of tribal societies of the present, most scholars today contend that the biblical genealogies do not constitute a reliable source for the reconstruction of history.' The current approach is that the genealogies may retain some value for the reconstruction of political ties on a national or tribal level,2 but that in no way should they be taken at face value. This is especially true for those genealogies which purport to be from early Israelite times, such as the lineages of Moses or David. In the present article I will offer some evidence which, depending on how it is judged, may stem the tide described above. The approach to be taken will differ from recent work on the subject, in that it will adduce no external evidence from either ancient or modern times. Instead, I will concentrate on the genealogies them- selves, in particular those lineages of characters who appear in Exodus through Joshua. I anticipate one of the results of my analysis with the following statement: the genealogies themselves 1 See especially R.
    [Show full text]
  • Lore of Proserpine
    LORE OF PROSERPINE BY MAURICE HEWLETT "Thus go the fairy kind, Whither Fate driveth; not as we Who fight with it, and deem us free Therefore, and after pine, or strain Against our prison bars in vain; For to them Fate is Lord of Life And Death, and idle is a strife With such a master..." —Hypsipyle This eBook was prepared by HKA January, 2004 From the edition published by CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS Published in New York April, 1913 This text is in the public domain. TO DESPOINA FROM WHOM, TO WHOM ALL PREFACE I HOPE nobody will ask me whether the things in this book are true, for it will then be my humiliating duty to reply that I don't know. They seem to be so to me writing them; they seemed to be so when they occurred, and one of them occurred only two or three years ago. That sort of answer satisfies me, and is the only one I can make. As I grow older it becomes more and more difficult to distinguish one kind of appearance from another, and to say, that is real, and again, that is illusion. Honestly, I meet in my daily walks innumerable beings, to all sensible signs male and female. Some of them I can touch, some smell, some speak with, some see, some discern otherwise than by sight. But if you cannot trust your eyes, why should you trust your nose or your fingers? There's my difficulty in talking about reality. There's another way of getting at the truth after all.
    [Show full text]