The Wanderer 13-14a: A hint of private prayer

The Wanderer 13-14a reveals that a man ought to “his ferðlocan fæste binde, / healde his hordcofan” (bind fast the closet of his  mind, to guard the chamber of his thoughts) in order to shelter his soul. This imagery of the compounds ferðloca and hordcofa recalls that of the word cubiculum in Ambro...

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Main Author: Gabriele Cocco
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Ledizioni 2024-09-01
Series:Filologia Germanica
Online Access:https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/filologiagermanica/article/view/2563
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author Gabriele Cocco
author_facet Gabriele Cocco
author_sort Gabriele Cocco
collection DOAJ
description The Wanderer 13-14a reveals that a man ought to “his ferðlocan fæste binde, / healde his hordcofan” (bind fast the closet of his  mind, to guard the chamber of his thoughts) in order to shelter his soul. This imagery of the compounds ferðloca and hordcofa recalls that of the word cubiculum in Ambrose’s exegesis on Mt. 6:6, “tu autem cum orabis intra in cubiculum tuum”, in De Cain et Abel I, 9.38, “cubiculum quod est in te, in quo includuntur cogitationes tuas, in quo versantur sensus tui”. The metaphorical portrayal of the heart as the innermost cubiculum of private prayer also occurs in some writings by Augustine. Ambrose’s elucidation on the term cubiculum concerning the cogitatio and the sensus, as well as Augustinian theology, may have influenced the poet in his lexical choice for the compound nouns ferðloca and hordcofa while attempting to portray the views the Anglo-Saxons had on the “fettered mind”.
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spelling doaj-art-6ccda9388ebb4a13be453307dfc0cba32025-08-20T03:12:57ZdeuLedizioniFilologia Germanica2036-89922024-09-011010.14672/fg.v10i.2563The Wanderer 13-14a: A hint of private prayerGabriele Cocco0Dottore di ricerca in Filologia Germanica, Università di Padova, Italia The Wanderer 13-14a reveals that a man ought to “his ferðlocan fæste binde, / healde his hordcofan” (bind fast the closet of his  mind, to guard the chamber of his thoughts) in order to shelter his soul. This imagery of the compounds ferðloca and hordcofa recalls that of the word cubiculum in Ambrose’s exegesis on Mt. 6:6, “tu autem cum orabis intra in cubiculum tuum”, in De Cain et Abel I, 9.38, “cubiculum quod est in te, in quo includuntur cogitationes tuas, in quo versantur sensus tui”. The metaphorical portrayal of the heart as the innermost cubiculum of private prayer also occurs in some writings by Augustine. Ambrose’s elucidation on the term cubiculum concerning the cogitatio and the sensus, as well as Augustinian theology, may have influenced the poet in his lexical choice for the compound nouns ferðloca and hordcofa while attempting to portray the views the Anglo-Saxons had on the “fettered mind”. https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/filologiagermanica/article/view/2563
spellingShingle Gabriele Cocco
The Wanderer 13-14a: A hint of private prayer
Filologia Germanica
title The Wanderer 13-14a: A hint of private prayer
title_full The Wanderer 13-14a: A hint of private prayer
title_fullStr The Wanderer 13-14a: A hint of private prayer
title_full_unstemmed The Wanderer 13-14a: A hint of private prayer
title_short The Wanderer 13-14a: A hint of private prayer
title_sort wanderer 13 14a a hint of private prayer
url https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/filologiagermanica/article/view/2563
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