← “Everybody’s coming, leave your body at the door…”
“What was the question? I was looking at the big sky.” →

“Keeping versed and on my feet…”

As Today in Literature reminds us, yesterday, April 18, was the day Chaucer’s pilgrims set out for Canterbury. Appropriately, my block was packed with pilgrims passing to and fro, some of them heading to the zoo, the hooly blisful pandas for to seke, others hiking up the hill to our friendly neighborhood Gothic cathedral.

The cathedral grounds were in full bloom today: camera-toting tourists, elderly couples asleep in the grass, wedding parties, flirting lovers, romping puppies, children fleeing bees, even bagpipers, as if to lead us grandly out of town. Beauty intermingled with chaos; Chaucer no doubt would approve.

But not every medieval poet took the path of the pilgrim for granted. Writing six centuries before Chaucer, that old wit Theodulf, bishop of Orleans during the reign of Charlemagne, rolled his eyes at peregrinatory pretensions:

Qui Romam Roma, Turonum Turonove catervas
Ire, redire cupis cernere scande, vide.
Hinc sata spectabis, vites et claustra ferarum;
Flumina, prata, vias, pomiferumque nemus.
Haec dum conspicies, dum plurima grata videbis,
Auctoris horum sis memor ipse dei.

Here, inspired by an afternoon on the green alongside the Bishop’s Garden, is a shamefully loose translation:

You clamor for the crowd, for something more;
So take your tour of Rome, and roam to Tours.
The tender crops are all we gather here,
By berries, brooks, and barns, and byways clear.
So go—for if you stay, you’ll just recall
In simple sights the one who made it all.

I know! Spring fever is my only defense. The tulips made me do it.

In denying the pilgrimage instinct, Theodulf fought, with snide futility, the tide of human nature. Geoffrey Chaucer better understood his fellow man—in fact, I think Geoffrey better understood a great many other truths as well—but Theodulf was right about one thing: Some days, whatever it is you’re looking for, that unnamed source of fulfillment and beauty which seems like it ought to be elsewhere, may turn up outside your own door.

Saturday, April 19, 2008, 9:16 pm in National Cathedral, Theodulf, translations, Chaucer, Washington |

One response to “Keeping versed and on my feet…”

  1. # 1 - Laura(southernxyl) wrote:
    Monday, April 21, 2008, at 7:52 am

    What a nice picture, with the tulips.

    I let April 18th come and go, but my yearly reminder of Chaucer comes when the smale foweles start screaming their heads off all night. Or it did in Memphis. It seems in Florida that they holler year round.

Leave a comment:

(Comments with links may be held briefly for moderation.)

  • Quid plura?

    "Quid plura?" is the blog of Jeff Sypeck, a writer in Washington, D.C.

  • Becoming Charlemagne is now available as a Harper Perennial paperback. Order a copy today!

  • cover
  • Archives

    • September 2010
    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009
    • May 2009
    • April 2009
    • March 2009
    • February 2009
    • January 2009
    • December 2008
    • November 2008
    • October 2008
    • September 2008
    • August 2008
    • July 2008
    • June 2008
    • May 2008
    • April 2008
    • March 2008
    • February 2008
    • January 2008
    • December 2007
    • November 2007
    • October 2007
    • September 2007
    • August 2007
    • July 2007
    • June 2007
  • Categories

    • applied paleobromatology (3)
    • Arthuriana (12)
    • Balkans (4)
    • Beowulf (7)
    • Best of 2007 (1)
    • Best of 2008 (1)
    • Best of 2009 (1)
    • bookstores (2)
    • Byzantium (1)
    • Caucasus (2)
    • Charlemagne (40)
    • Chaucer (7)
    • Delaware (1)
    • galangal (2)
    • gargoyles/grotesques (21)
    • Iceland (19)
    • Ireland (1)
    • literature (55)
    • Lloyd Alexander (18)
    • Longfellow (2)
    • looking up (19)
    • Louisiana (13)
    • medieval shark week (1)
    • medievalism (92)
    • Merovingians (1)
    • miscellaneous (77)
    • National Cathedral (29)
    • New Jersey (14)
    • New York (1)
    • Old English (8)
    • philanthropy (3)
    • philology (3)
    • politics (7)
    • Rome (1)
    • SF/fantasy (11)
    • Sir Gawain (5)
    • statues (33)
    • teaching (9)
    • Tennyson (2)
    • Theodulf (7)
    • Tolkien (2)
    • translations (12)
    • travel (7)
    • videos (4)
    • Washington (53)
    • writing (32)
  • Contact

    • jeffsypeck -at- gmail.com


Quid plura? © 2007 All Rights Reserved. Hosted by ThatHostingPlace.com.
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).

This blog uses a modified version of the ShinyRoad 2.1 WordPress theme by Nurudin Jauhari.