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This chapter considers seventeenth-century poetic works that take various positions, implicitly or explicitly, on the question of the relationship between human and divine creation: Margaret Cavendish’s prose fiction Blazing World, biblical creation epics by Guillaume Du Bartas and Lucy Hutchinson, and topographical poems by Sir John Denham and Andrew Marvell. Cavendish and Marvell suggest that it is prideful and misleading to assume that humans can discover truth about divine creation by natural means; Du Bartas and Denham, by contrast, tend to collapse the distance between humans and God, frequently casting God as an “architect” or other type of human creator. Situated between these two groups is Hutchinson, who believes humans can gain insights into God’s ways by looking at our own—but these insights are only ever shadowy and partial and frequently need to be supplemented by divine revelation.
Flodoard’s The Triumphs of Christ, an epic history of Christianity narrated in almost 20,000 lines of hexameter, is one of the longest and most remarkable poems to have survived from the early Middle Ages. It has been highly neglected by both historians and literary scholars, however, who have tended to look upon it as a simple compilation and versification of earlier Christian historiography and hagiography. The fundamental argument of this chapter is that this characterisation is unjust, and that the Triumphs is in fact a work of considerable innovation that sheds light on education, literary culture and intellectual life in the tenth century. An examination of the structure, content and sources of the poem demonstrates that Flodoard conceived the poem as a continuation of the biblical epics of late antiquity. I then explore the implications of this for why Flodoard composed the work and what it reveals about his notions of history and history-writing. By using the Triumphs as a window onto Flodoard’s intellectual activities and networks, I suggest that the early tenth-century Latin West was not the literary desert it is often portrayed as.
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