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022_000071/0000

Initiation into the Mysteries. A Collection of Studies in Religion, Philosophy and the Arts

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Field of science
Irodalomelmélet, összehasonlító irodalomtudomány, irodalmi stílusok / Literary theory and comparative literature, literary styles (13021)
Series
Collection Károli. Collection of Papers
Type of publication
tanulmánykötet
022_000071/0128
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Page 129 [129]
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022_000071/0128

OCR

WORDING THE SILENCE: INITIATORY READING OF MYSTICAL TEXTS and heaven is what gives structure to the statement: the language of heaven (hemelsche redene) cannot be understood by means of earthly things (ertrike). But for what she has experienced, she does not know ‘any Dutch or any language’, although she does know all ‘sensible speech of which a person can know’ (alle redene van sinne alsoe mensche connen mach, 114-120) For all I have said to you is like no Dutch in regard to this, for no Dutch belongs to this, so far as I know. (Letter 17, 114-122) Want al dat ic v gheseghet hebbe / dat en es alse gheen dietsch daer toe / want daer en hoert gheen toe dat ic weet. At the end of the letter she demands the works of love of her friend and disciple. She does so by means of a construction that in its form unites ‘working’ and ‘resting’. At the centre of the same syntactic form repeated four times, are four verbs that in each case express activity but in the impersonal infinitive: ‘to take upon’, ‘to work’, ‘to protect’ and ‘to further’. This active core is surrounded by the harmonising ‘nothing else... than Love’, in which the stress falls naturally on Minne: Nothing else to take upon one than Love, nothing else to work than Love, nothing else to protect than Love, nothing else to further than Love. (Letter 17, 131-134) El niet te onderwindene dan Minne / El niet te werkene dan Minne, / El niet te bescermene dan Minne, El niet in staden te stane dan Minne. But then, her role as magistra ends: How you are to do and to leave undone each of these things, may God, our Beloved, point out that to you hoe ghi elc doen selt ende laten, / dat moet v god wisen, onse lief. God himself must show her how to find her own balance. Hadewijch uses a similar rhetorical device in her shortest letter, which I am going to quote from beginning to end below. Whereas in Letter 17 her conclusion is that the addressee must obtain knowledge from God by experiencing Him in unity, here she introduces the letter with the following topos. She starts with the remark that God himself must teach the ‘beloved + 127 + Daréczi-Sepsi-Vassänyi_Initiation_155x240.indb 127 6 2020.06.15. 11:04:16

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