Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: King Robert the Bruce’s Book
- 1 The Manuscript and Print Contexts of Barbour’s Bruce
- 2 Medieval Romance and the Generic Frictions of Barbour’s Bruce
- 3 Scripting the National Past: A Textual Community of the Realm
- 4 Chivalric Biography and Medieval Life-Writing
- 5 The Vocabulary of Chivalric Description in Late Fourteenth-Century Biography
- 6 A Nation of Knights? Chivalry and the Community of the Realm in Barbour’s Bruce
- 7 John Barbour’s Scholastic Discourse on Thraldom
- 8 Rethinking Scottish Origins
- 9 ‘Thar nobill eldrys gret bounte’: The Bruce and Early Stewart Scotland
- 10 Barbour’s Bruce in the 1480s: Literature and Locality
- Index
7 - John Barbour’s Scholastic Discourse on Thraldom
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 March 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: King Robert the Bruce’s Book
- 1 The Manuscript and Print Contexts of Barbour’s Bruce
- 2 Medieval Romance and the Generic Frictions of Barbour’s Bruce
- 3 Scripting the National Past: A Textual Community of the Realm
- 4 Chivalric Biography and Medieval Life-Writing
- 5 The Vocabulary of Chivalric Description in Late Fourteenth-Century Biography
- 6 A Nation of Knights? Chivalry and the Community of the Realm in Barbour’s Bruce
- 7 John Barbour’s Scholastic Discourse on Thraldom
- 8 Rethinking Scottish Origins
- 9 ‘Thar nobill eldrys gret bounte’: The Bruce and Early Stewart Scotland
- 10 Barbour’s Bruce in the 1480s: Literature and Locality
- Index
Summary
John Barbour’s eulogy to freedom is arguably the most celebrated passage of Early Scots literature. But only the first half of his discussion of the subject is well known. The second half is in fact a rumination on the nature of thraldom and a glance at its bookish conclusion is sufficient to explain why few have bothered to learn it by heart. Clerics dispute, Barbour informs us, whether a thrall should prioritize the command of his master or his marital duty:
Than may clerkis questioun
Quhen thai fall in disputacioun
That gyff man bad his thryll owcht do
And in the samyn tym come him to
His wyff and askyt him hyr det
Quhether he his lordis neid suld let
And pay fryst that he awcht and syne
Do furth his lordis commandyne
Or leve onpayit his wyfff and do
Thai thingis that commaundyt is him to
I leve all the solucioun
Till thaim that ar off mar renoun.
The pedestrian style and apparent irrelevance of the aside that ends the famous eulogy have mystified commentators of The Bruce. Historians like Edward Cowan are understandably unhappy with this ‘feeble conclusion’. It adds little, it seems, to the discourse on national independence which the rest of the poem is taken to promote. In addition, from an aesthetical point of view – compared to the catching pathos of the eulogy’s beginning (A! Fredome is a noble thing!) – it is rather disappointing.
Barbour’s poetical failure is not the issue here. This chapter identifies theological, legal and philosophical facets of Barbour’s discourse on thraldom. This part of The Bruce and its particular scholastic features merit attention on several accounts. Historians like Geoffrey Barrow and Edward Cowan have discussed how Barbour’s praise of freedom connected to the constitutional issues of the day, but have paid little attention to his account of thraldom. Yet Barbour insisted that to understand freedom we must examine thraldom. And it is the discourse on thraldom that presents his view on the constitutional issue that modern historians have been keen to explore. Another reason to examine this part of The Bruce moves beyond the confines of Scottish historical politics. Barbour’s discourse on thraldom illustrates one of the intellectual milieus that shaped him as an author. The exploration of Barbour’s intellectual world is essential for a fuller appreciation of The Bruce.
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- Information
- Barbour's Bruce and its Cultural ContextsPolitics, Chivalry and Literature in Late Medieval Scotland, pp. 149 - 162Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015
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