Whitby, we must remember, was founded by Celtic, and not by Roman monks. It was founded by monks who came from Ireland to Iona, and from thence to Northumbria. To them the teaching of Christ had come from Jerusalem and the East rather than from Rome. So here again, perhaps, we can see the effect of the Celts on our literature. It was from Celtic monks that Caedmon heard the story of the war in heaven.
After telling of this war, Caedmon goes on to relate how the wicked angels "into darkness urged them their darksome way."
"They might not loudly laugh, But they in h.e.l.l-torments, Dwelt accursed.
And woe they knew Pain and sorrow, Torment endured With darkness decked, Hard retribution, For that they had devised Against G.o.d to war."
Then after all the fierce clash of battle come a few lines which seem like peace after war, quiet after storm.
"Then was after as before Peace in heaven, Fair-loving thanes, The Lord dear to all."
Then G.o.d grieved at the empty s.p.a.ces in heaven from whence the wicked angels had been driven forth. And that they might at last be filled again, he made the world and placed a man and woman there. This to the chief of the fallen angels was grief and pain, and his heart boiled within him in anger.
"Heaven is lost to us," he cried; "but now that we may not have it, let us so act that it shall be lost to them also. Let us make them disobey G.o.d, "Then with them will he be wroth of mind, Will cast them from his favor, Then shall they seek this h.e.l.l And these grim depths, Then may we have them to ourselves as va.s.sals, The children of men in this fast durance."
Then Satan asks who will help him to tempt mankind to do wrong.
"If to any followers I princely treasure gave of old while we in that good realm happy sate," let him my gift repay, let him now aid me.
So one of Satan"s followers made himself ready. "On his head the chief his helmet set," and he, "wheeled up from thence, departed through the doors of h.e.l.l lionlike in air, in hostile mood, dashed the fire aside, with a fiend"s power."
Caedmon next tells how the fiend tempted first the man and then the woman with guileful lies to eat of the fruit which had been forbidden to them, and how Eve yielded to him. And having eaten of the forbidden fruit, Eve urged Adam too to eat, for it seemed to her that a fair new life was open to her. "I see G.o.d"s angels," she said,
"Encompa.s.s him With feathery wings Of all folk greatest, Of bands most joyous.
I can hear from far And so widely see, Through the whole world, Over the broad creation.
I can the joy of the firmament Hear in heaven.
It became light to me in mind From without and within After the fruit I tasted."
And thus, urged by Eve, Adam too ate of the forbidden fruit, and the man and woman were driven out of the Happy Garden, and the curse fell upon them because of their disobedience.
So they went forth "into a narrower life." Yet there was left to them "the roof adorned with holy stars, and earth to them her ample riches gave."
In many places this poem is only a paraphrase of the Bible. A paraphrase means the same thing said in other words. But in other places the poet seems to forget his model and sings out of his own heart. Then his song is best. Perhaps some of the most beautiful lines are those which tell of the dove that Noah sent forth from the ark.
"Then after seven nights He from the ark let forth A palid dove To fly after the swart raven, Over the deep water, To quest whether the foaming sea Had of the green earth Yet any part laid bare.
Wide she flew seeking her own will, Far she flew yet found no rest.
Because of the flood With her feet she might not perch on land, Nor on the tree leaves light.
For the steep mountain tops Were whelmed in waters.
Then the wild bird went At eventide the ark to seek.
Over the darling wave she flew Weary, to sink hungry To the hands of the holy man."
A second time the dove is sent forth, and this is how the poet tells of it:--
"Far and wide she flew Glad in flying free, till she found a place On a gentle tree. Gay of mood she was and glad Since she sorely tired, now could settle down, On the branches of the tree, on its beamy mast.
Then she fluttered feathers, went a flying off again, With her booty flew, brought it to the sailor, From an olive tree a twig, right into his hands Brought the blade of green.
"Then the chief of seamen knew that gladness was at hand, and he sent forth after three weeks the wild dove who came not back again; for she saw the land of the greening trees. The happy creature, all rejoicing, would no longer of the ark, for she needed it no more."*
*Stopford Brooke
Besides Genesis many other poems were thought at one time to have been made by Caedmon. The chief of these are Exodus and Daniel.
They are all in an old book, called the Junian MS., from the name of the man, Francis Dujon, who first published them. The MS. was found among some other old books in Trinity College, Dublin, and given to Francis Dujon. He published the poems in 1655, and it is from that time that we date our knowledge of Caedmon.
Wise men tell us that Caedmon could not have made any of these poems, not even the Genesis of which you have been reading. But if Caedmon did not make these very poems, he made others like them which have been lost. It was he who first showed the way, and other poets followed.
We need not wonder, perhaps, that our poetry is a splendor of the world when we remember that it is rooted in these grand old tales, and that it awoke to life through the singing of a strong son of the soil, a herdsman and a poet. We know very little of this first of English poets, but what we do know makes us love him. He must have been a gentle, humble, kindly man, tender of heart and pure of mind. Of his birth we know nothing; of his life little except the story which has been told. And when death came to him, he met it cheerfully as he had lived.
For some days he had been ill, but able still to walk and talk.
But one night, feeling that the end of life for him was near, he asked the brothers to give to him for the last time the Eucharist, or sacrament of the Lord"s Supper.
"They answered, "What need of the Eucharist? for you are not likely to die, since you talk so merrily with us, as if you were in perfect health."
""However," said he, "bring me the Eucharist."
"Having received the same into his hand, he asked whether they were all in charity with him, and without any enmity or rancour.
"They answered that they were all in perfect charity and free from anger; and in their turn asked him whether he was in the same mind towards them.
"He answered, "I am in charity, my children, with all the servants of G.o.d."
"Then, strengthening himself with the heavenly viatic.u.m,* he prepared for the entrance into another life, and asked how near the time was when the brothers were to be awakened to sing the nocturnal praises of our Lord.
*The Eucharist given to the dying.
"They answered, "It is not far off."
"Then he said, "Well, let us wait that hour." And signing himself with the sign of the cross, he laid his head on the pillow, and falling into a slumber ended his life so in silence."
Thus his life, which had been begun in silence, ended also in silence, with just a few singing years between.
"Thus it came to pa.s.s, that as he had served G.o.d with a simple and pure mind, and undisturbed devotion, so he now departed to His presence, leaving the world by a quiet death. And that tongue which had composed so many holy words in praise of the Creator, uttered its last words while he was in the act of signing himself with a cross, and recommending himself into His hands."*
*Bede, Ecclesiastical History
At Whitby still the ruins of a monastery stand. It is not the monastery over which the Abbess Hilda ruled or in which Caedmon sang, for in the ninth century that was plundered and destroyed by the fierce hordes of Danes who swept our sh.o.r.es. But in the twelfth century the house was rebuilt, and parts of that building are still to be seen.
Chapter XIV THE FATHER OF ENGLISH HISTORY
WHILE Caedmon was still singing at Whitby, in another Northumbrian village named Jarrow a boy was born. This boy we know as Bede, and when he was seven years old his friends gave him into the keeping of the Abbot of Wearmouth. Under this Abbot there were two monasteries, the one at Jarrow and the other at Wearmouth, a few miles distant. And in these two monasteries Bede spent all the rest of his life.
When Bede was eight years old Caedmon died. And although the little boy had never met the great, but humble poet, he must have heard of him, and it is from Bede"s history that we learn all that we know of Caedmon.
There is almost as little to tell of Bede"s life as of Caedmon"s.
He pa.s.sed it peacefully, reading, writing, and teaching within the walls of his beloved monastery. But without the walls wars often raged, for England was at this time still divided into several kingdoms, whose kings often fought against each other.