"We know Chaucer in the only way in which the greater authors generally have cared to be known. ...All we need further in the way of fact is some knowledge of the literary conditions of his time. Publication in our modern sense there was none. So long as copies were still made laboriously by hand, circulation was very slow and very limited. Authors wrote for few readers; they had to depend largely for the spread of their works on patrons in positions of influence; and they were never certain that any two copies would be exactly alike. Many books were written in the middle age; but only the most popular of them were circulated in many copies, and sometimes the more copies, the more variations there were from the original. ...authors were at the mercy of the scriveners, or copyists... If the books that a medieval author wrote were thus scarce, dear and inaccurate, so often were the books that he read. The change wrought in this respect by the printing press is too great for us to realize without a strong effort of imagination. ...in Chaucer's time twenty books were a considerable collection, such as would not often be seen outside of the monastic and cathedral libraries ...Nor were even the libraries of cathedrals and monasteries either large or accessible according to our modern habits. ... Adding to the situation the slowness and difficulty of travel, one begins to realize that in the middle age wide reading was easy in only a few centers, and that even in these a man must sometimes have studied not so much what he wanted as what he could get."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Charles Sears Baldwin, An Introduction to English Medieval Literature (1914)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Middle_Ages
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Middle Ages
64 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Middle Ages →
Related Quotes
"Thou sayst: 'I see the air, I see the fire, The water, and the earth, and all their mixtures Come to corruption, and …"
"The existence of God may be proved in five ways. The first and most manifest way is the argument from motion. ...What…"
"Music historians have learned that the language and approach of musical theory in the Middle Ages were borrowed direc…"
"[...] there are things in the media that can be spoken ill of with impunity: the Middle Ages is one of them. And this…"
"My own case for Christianity is rational; but it is not simple. It is an accumulation of varied facts, like the attit…"
"No two ideals could be more opposite than a Christian saint in a Gothic cathedral and a Buddhist saint in a Chinese t…"
"I do not mean to say... that these love discussions... were without their influence upon the conduct and ideals of co…"
"This volume, it is believed, contains all the most important tales which formed the great body of mediaeval legend or…"
"Why do philosophers call aboutness "? ...[M]edieval philosophers ...coined the term, noting the similarity between su…"
"Thou sayest, 'Well discern I what I hear; But it is hidden from me why God willed For our redemption only this one mo…"