Tuesday, May 1, 2012

All About Three Things on Four Legs [12:31-33] (Latin)

Translation
Recordings
Cattle-trot Strut
On Calves
A Buffalo Re-Buff?
Closing

{Buffalo: so wild that they don't even keep within manuscript borders. Image from the National Library of the Netherlands Medieval Illuminated Manuscript Collection.}


St. Isidore moves pretty quickly through the next three types of animals, so let's get right to it.

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Translation

[31] "Cow it is called, like cattle. In fact, it is a name from the quality of their movement, just as leonine comes from lion and draconic comes from dragon.

[32] Calves are so called from the Latin for greenness, that is the green age, just like a maiden. Thus the calf is small and does not have the power of generation: for only the bullock or cow has the power of generation.

[33] Buffalo they are called by derivation, which are like cattle; though they are wild so that they will not take the burden of a yoke upon their necks."
(St. Isidore of Seville, Etymologiae 12:31-33)

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Recordings

Latin:



Modern English:



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Cattle-trot Strut

Cow and cattle - the relationship in English is as clear as the relationship in Latin, that is, between "vacca" (the "v" is pronounced like a "w") and "boacca" (12:31).

What's not clear though is just what is meant by "cattle" coming from "the quality of their movement," ("Est enim ex qualitate mobilium nominum" (12:31)), it's just plain bizarre.

Maybe English has a word for the same sort of movement already, or maybe there just wasn't a need for a word for that kind of movement. What sort of movement marks a cow, anyway? Slow, steady, and sturdy? This is a relatively simple passage to translate, but the precise meaning of it is rather puzzling.

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On Calves

Calves ("vitulus et vitula" (12:32)) being so named because of the Latin words' relation to the Latin for "green" ("viriditate") is much clearer.

Calves are young, prefer to frolic in the field, and, if pagan religious rites are any indication, iconic of the innocence associated with youth. Likewise, the propensity to sacrifice bullocks also makes sense since those are the male cattle that have just gained the power of generation, having gone through bovine puberty.

Paragraph 32 definitely deserves a medal of some sort for being so forthright and direct. But maybe it's like that because there's so little to say about the calf - cattle have already been likened to humans in that they seem to show compassion and so all that's needed here is an analogy to a maiden, one without any sort of blemish or lack in its purity. In fact, the word translated into "maiden," ("virgo" (12:32)), also could be translated as "virgin."

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A Buffalo Re-Buff?

Then, we have the buffalo.

Isidore must mean that they're like cattle in appearance and maybe in the way that they move, but otherwise they're not given much of a chance. In fact, the mere note that they're too wild to be yoked suggests, through negation, that they're nothing at all like cattle in their character.

After all, the yoke is very much symbolic of cattle in this period. The yoke could even be used as a metonymy for them with no real problem in understanding whatsoever. So the buffalo's refusal of the yoke seems to be Isidore's way of making clear that they look like cattle, but lordy, they ain't no cattle.

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Closing

Check back here on Thursday for Beowulf's reaction to his sword that "bit less strongly" than necessary in last week's entry (Beowulf l.2578).

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