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Christian : Catholic
12th Century

About Hildegard of Bingen

Timeline (1098 - 1179)

Hildegard of Bingen, Hildegard of Bingen poetry, Christian, Christian poetry, Catholic poetry, [TRADITION SUB2] poetry,  poetry

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English version by
Barbara Newman

Original Language
Latin

O spectabiles viri / Antiphon for Patriarchs and Prophets

Commentary by
Ivan M. Granger

Themes
  Death
  Fire
  Light
  Mountain
  Water

 

Recommended Books

The Book of the Rewards of Life: Liber Vitae Meritorum, by Hildegard of Bingen / Translated by Bruce W. Hozeski
Creation and Christ: The Wisdom of Hildegard of Bingen, Translated by Columbar Hart / Translated by Jane Bishop
German Mystical Writings: Hildegard of Bingen, Meister Eckhart, Jacob Boehme, and others, Edited by Karen J. Campbell
Hildegard of Bingen, by Regine Pernoud / Translated by Paul Duggan
Hildegard of Bingen, by Nancy Fierro

More >>

Spectacular men! you see
with the spirit's eyes,
piercing the veil.
In a luminous shade you proclaim
a sharp living brightness
that buds from a branch
that blossomed alone
when the radical light took root.

Holy ones of old! you foretold
deliverance for the souls
of exiles
slumped in the dead lands.

Like wheels you
spun round in wonder as you spoke
of the mysterious mountain
at the brink of heaven
that stills many waters, sailing
over the waves.

And a shining lamp
burned in the midst of you!
Pointing,
he runs to the mountain.

 

 

-- from Symphonia: A Critical Edition of the Symphonia armonie celstium revelationum, by Hildegard of Bingen / Translated by Barbara Newman

Amazon.com

 

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Commentary by Ivan M. Granger

A few thoughts --

Spectacular men! you see
with the spirit's eyes,
piercing the veil.

That taunting veil of surface seeming. It both hides and it reveals. It dances and teases the senses. But there is a point at which we must learn to see through its gauzy fabric.

In a luminous shade...

I've spoken often of the radiance experienced by many mystics in deep contemplation ("And a shining lamp / burned in the midst of you!"), but I like the way Hildegard von Bingen pairs that luminosity with "shade." All of this imagery of light can sound overly intense, like a place of no rest. To me, Hildegard's use of shade suggests a gentle shielding, a space of quietude, profound peace amidst the glow.

Like wheels you
spun round in wonder as you spoke...

These lines put a wide grin on my face. The imagery, the words carry a sense of delight. Pure wonder -- at the Divine, at the sheer immensity of Existence -- floods us, fills us, until all we can do is turn in all directions, in witness to the All. This almost brings to mind the image of Mevlevi dervishes, spinning and spinning, at once animated and at rest in divine contemplation.

...of the mysterious mountain
at the brink of heaven
that stills many waters, sailing
over the waves.

The mountain, like Christ, brings calm to the waters. But the phrasing here is particularly interesting to me. To talk of stilling "many waters" uses the gospel story of Christ calming the water and transmutes it into a broader statement about the psyche and its relationship with the world around it. It suggests a profound stilling of the turbulent movement that occurs throughout creation. It suggests the waves of the mind and its disharmonious perceptions of the world being made still, calm, clear. This "mysterious mountain," which is the bridge to heaven ("at the brink of heaven"), summons forth the hidden awareness of the harmonious unity of creation.


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Ivan M. Granger's original poetry, stories and commentaries are Copyright © 2002 - 2008 by Ivan M. Granger.
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