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Literary Contributions Of King Alfred The Great

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The Literary Contributions of King Alfred the Great

Our understanding of the literary achievements of King Alfred depend very much

upon what we believe about his early education. If we are content to accept the stories of

Asser, the famous biographer of Alfred, that he reached his twelfth birthday before he

learned to read (Keynes 75), then we must reckon his literary career as a phenomenon

which can only be described, not explained. Or, if that is not satisfactory, we may

compare him in his adult life to his grandfather’s (Egbert) contemporary Charles the Bald

(grandson of Charlemange), who, being illiterate, knew the value of learning, and

surrounded himself with educated men (Collins 297).

As a child Alfred received little formal training or schooling. He did possess a

highly retentive memory and particularly enjoyed listening to the court bards reciting

poetry. One day his mother, holding a fine manuscript book in her hand, said to Alfred

and his elder brothers, ‘I will give this book to whichever of you can learn it most

quickly.’ Although he could not read, Alfred was greatly attracted to the book and was

determined to own it. Forestalling his brothers, he took it to his teacher who read it to

him. He then went back to his mother and repeated the entire book from memory to her

(Fadiman 14, Keynes 75). This talent was the foundation of Alfred’s later reputation as a

scholar, translator, and patron of learning.

As Alfred’s role as king and patron began, he solemnly noted on several occasions

his disappointment in the state of educational opportunity in England. “Formerly,” the

King wrote bitterly, “men came hither from foreign lands to seek for instruction, and now

when we desire it we can only obtain it from abroad” (Collins 329, Smyth 249-250). But

his efforts were far from being imprisoned within his own island. He sent shipmasters to

the seas and coasts of the continent and surrounding islands in search of dialogue with

others.

It was with the Franks, from central Europe (present day Germany, France, and

surrounding countries), that his dealings were closest, and it was from them that he

invited scholars to aid him in his work of education. A scholar named Grimbald came

from St. Omer to preside over his new abbey at Winchester; and John the Old Saxon, was

brought from the abbey of Corbey to rule a monastery and school that Alfred’s gratitude

for his deliverance from the wars with the Danes raised in the marshes of Athelney

(Keynes 26-27, Stevenson 93,103) The real work, however, to be done was done, not by

these scholars, but by the King himself. Alfred established a school for the young nobles

of his court, and it was to the need of books for these scholars in their own tongue that

we owe his most remarkable literary effort.

Alfred emersed himself in his books as he found them — they were popular

manuals of his age — The Consolidation of Philosophy by Boethius, St. Augustine’s

Soliloquies, Pope Gregory’s Pastoral Care, and the first fifty psalms of the Psalter. These

Alfred is credited with translating himself. In addition, several translations were

prepared as part of Alfred’s plan, they include, the compilation of Orosius’ Histories

Against the Pagans (the one book of universal history), Bede’s Ecclesiastical History, and

the history of his own people in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. (Keynes 29, Smyth 527-566)

In addition to translating these works into English, he was also responsible for the editing

(omitting here and expanding there) of most of the books. He enriched Orosius by

sketching new geographical discoveries in the north of England and Scandinavia. He

gave a West Saxon form to his selections from Bede. In one place he stops to explain his

theory of government, his wish for a thicker population, his conception of national

welfare as consisting in a due balance of priest, soldier, and peasant (Keynes 132-133,

Smyth 530-534). And the cold providence of Boethius gave way to Alfred’s enthusiastic

acknowledgment of the goodness of God (Keynes 137, Smyth 562-566).

As he writes, his large-hearted nature casts aside its royal mantle, and he talks as

a man to men. “Do not blame me,” he states with charming simplicity, “if any know

Latin better than I, for every man must say what he says and do what he does according

to his ability” (Collins 334).

But a simple was his aim, Alfred changed the whole front of English literature as

we know it. Before him, England possessed in her own tongue one great poem and a

train of ballads and battle-songs (Abrahms 2). Of prose the country had none. The large

volume of books that fill England’s libraries began with the translations of Alfred, and

above all the chronicles of his reign. It seems likely that the King’s rendering of Bede’s

history gave the first impulse toward the compilation of what is known as the English or

Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which was certainly thrown into its present form during his

reign. The meager lists of the kings of Wessex and the bishops of Winchester, which had

been preserved from older times, were roughly expanded into a national history by

insertions from Bede; but it is when it reaches the reign of Alfred that the chronicle and

Anglo-Saxon scholarship suddenly widens into the vigorous narrative, full of life and

originality, that marks the gift of a new power to the English language. Varying as it

does from age to age in historic value, Alfred’s contributions remain the first vernacular

history of any Teutonic people, and the earliest and most venerable monument of English

prose. As Charles Dickens later wrote in his book:

I pause to think with admiration of the noble king, who, in his single

person, possessed all the Saxon virtues; whom misfortune could not

subdue, whom prosperity could not spoil, whose perseverance nothing

could shake; who was hopeful in defeat, and generous in success; who

loved justice, freedom, truth, and knowledge; who, in his care to instruct

his people, probably did more to preserve the beautiful Saxon language

than I can imagine; without whom the English tongue in which I tell this

story might have wanted half its meaning.

Alfred’s intellectual activity breathed fresh life into English education and

literature. His capacity for inspiring trust and affection drew the hearts and minds of

Englishmen to a common center, and began the building of a new England. Never had

England seen a ruler who set aside every personal aim to devote himself solely to the

welfare of those whom he ruled.

If the sphere of his action seems too small to justify the comparison of him with

the few whom the world calls its greatest men, he rose to their level in the moral and

unselfish course of his life. And it is this which has hallowed his memory among the

English people. “I desire,” said the King in some of his last words, “I desire to leave to

the men that come after me a remembrance of me in good works” (Collins 343).

Abrams, M. H., ed. The Norton Anthology Of English Literature. 6th ed. Vol. 1. New

York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1993.

Collins, Roger. Early Medieval Europe 300-1000. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1991.

Dickens, Charles. A Child’s History Of England. Bureau of Electronic Publishing, Inc.,

1992.

Fadiman, Clifton, ed. The Little, Brown Book Of Anecdotes. Boston: Little, Brown And

Company, 1985.

Keynes, Simon, and Michael Lapidge, Introduction, Notes, and Trans. Alfred The Great:

Asser’s Life Of King Alfred And Other Contemporary Sources. Suffolk: The

Chaucer Press, 1983.

Smyth, Alfred P. King Alfred The Great. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.

Stevenson, W. H., ed. Asser’s Life of King Alfred 1904. Introd. by D. Whitelock.

Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1959.




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