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022_000064/0000

Protestantism, Knowledge and the World of Science / Protestantismus, Wissen und die Welt der Wissenschaften

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Title (EN)
Protestantism, Knowledge and the World of Science
Field of science
Történettudomány / History (12970)
Series
Collection Károli. Collection of Papers
Type of publication
tanulmánykötet
022_000064/0082
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022_000064/0082

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“DICTATES TO ME SLUMBRING” — DICTATION AND INSPIRATION IN PARADISE LOST in either Shakespeare or Marlowe — both of whom refer to dictators, though). A similarly great number of texts in the period mention dictation by God, the Spirit, or even Satan — in these we can perhaps see the influence of the then-burgeoning dictation theory in Protestant hermeneutics. A characteristic occurrence of the word from 1634 is the Mirrour of New Reformation, an anti-protestant work, pointing out that Beza in his Creophagia “preferr’d to be the Diuels scribe” and “without doubt he writ it against the Testament of the Sonne of God, while the Diuel did dictate it unto him.” Another example for the same use, but with the opposite value attached to dictation, could be taken from Samuel Wesley’s Life of Christ (1693): What passes here, what here we’ve done or said, Shall be by after-Ages, wond’ring read. Four Scribes will I to that great Task assign, Whilst the blest Spirit shall dictate every Line. (7.363-366) Or we could consider the following couplet from the front matter of Chapman’s Odyssey (actually a translation of a Greek epigram): The great Mzeonides doth onely write; And to him dictates, the great God of Light. The above examples are just a sample of the many occurrences of the concept of dictation in early modern literature, and are thus far from representative. However, even from this limited selection of quotes it becomes clear that dictation functions as a thing indifferent: it is always through the qualities and intentions attributed to the persons participating in the dictation process that it becomes part of any critical argument. Milton’s use of the word and its cognates throughout his oeuvre seems to follow suit: in answer to Salmasius’s Defence of the King, for example, he refers to his adversary in the Angli pro populo Anglicano Defensio as a “vile, mercenary foreigner” who is perfugarum dictata exscribentus that is, a “transcriber of what some fugitives dictate.”!f In Areopagitica we even find two different types of dictation implicitly contrasted. Expatiating on the pointless and harmful activity of licencing, Milton exclaims: 16 MILTON, John, Defensio Pro Populo Anglicano, Londini, Du Guardianis, 1651, 185; WASHINGTON, Joseph (trans.), A Defence of the People of England, London, Nathaniel Rolls, 1695, 188. +81 +

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