Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 197

Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 197
Saint Olafs Dream House 195 On the Divine Names”. Here, he says, Dionysius equates the monad first with the centre of a circle, which unites all the radii, - an appropriate idea for the theocentric dream house. He also equates the monad with the soul, which unifies the diverse powers of the whole body. Then Pseudo-Dionysius proceeds to draw a parallel with the sun which has diverse effects on the many objects of the sensible world, while it itself is one and shines upon them all with a uniform light.43 The sun and the Neoplatonic Mind are sometimes brought together. In Bernardus Silvestris’ Cosmographia (Microcosmos Ch. 5) the sun “is pre-eminent in brilliance, foremost in power, supreme in majesty, it is the mind of the universe.”44 Martianus Capella is not in doubt either: You (i.e. the sun) are the exalted power of the Father Unknown, his first offspring, the spark of sensation, source of mind, beginning of light, the ruler of nature, the glory and utterance of the gods, the eye of the universe, the splendor of the shining heaven . . . the circle of ether obeys you, and you govern the celestial bodies with your great circuits. (The Marriage of Philology andMercury § 185, tr. Stahl et al. 1977.)45 Also Christ has been equated with Mind (nous) (Lilla 1991, p. 603). As will be discussed later, Christ was associated with the sun, so evidently we have a web of correspondences, in which the monad, the sun, the mind and Christ are all equated with each other. The Six Brothers The author has a peculiar way of describing where the king’s companions sleep. In the company of the king there were six brothers, all of the same high rank in the court. When the king had lain down on his bed he had the bishop to his right and the queen to his left. In the quarter adjacent to his head three of the brothers were lying and the other three in the opposite quarter, at his feet. Here we have six brothers of equal rank placed above and below King Olaf. An allegorical interpretation is clearly called for. First, the significance of the number six should be pointed out. It is a number symbolizing creation, in Christianity most obviously related to the six days of creation (Zahlten 1979, cf. also Ps.-Iamblichus The Theology ofArithmetic). In this context St. Augustine (The City ofGod XI 30) explains why it is a perfect number: it is the first number which is the sum of its parts, that is of its fractions, the sixth, the third and the half; for one, two and three added together make six. Its use as a symbol of creation is related to the idea 43 Cf. Ps.-Dionysius The Divine Names 821A-824C. 44 Cf. Macrobius Saturnalia 1.19.9, also Cicero Dream ofScipioA: “Next, and occupying almost the middle region, comes the sun, leader, chief, and regulator of the other lights, mind and moderator of the universe, of such magnitude that it fills all with its radiance” (tr. Stahl 1990). 45 Cf. Pliny Natural History 2.13: “We must believe that the sun is the soul, or, more intelligibly, the mind of the universe, the ruling principle and divinity of Nature” (tr. Healy 1991).
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