An Inspirational Gift
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Alcuin of York - Wikipedia
As mentioned earlier, Alcuin of York was the proud owner of one very fancy comb. Alcuin was a renowned Anglo-Saxon clergyman and scholar who was educated in York. He later served at the court of Charlemagne, advising the king and teaching in philosophy and theology.
Bestia nam subito nostras subrepserat aedes,
In qua imago fuit capitum miranda duorum;
Quae maxilla tamen pariter coniunxerat una.
Bis temis decies sed dentibus horruit illa.
Esca fuit crescens illis de corpore vivo,
Net care, net fruges. Fructus net vina bibentum
Dentibus edebat; patulo non tabuit ore.
Scis, Damoeta meus, quae sit haec bestia talis?
As you might have guessed from everything that has been discussed so far, the answer to this riddle is: a comb. The two heads of the beast refer to the two sides of the comb. The food building up in the teeth could simply be hair (PSA to clean your own hairbrush today), but it could also refer to lice.
The way Alcuin goes about describing the comb in this riddle is a staple of the Old English riddling tradition, although the riddle itself is in Latin. Alcuin uses many metaphors, calling the comb a wild animal and a beast, and likening the teeth of the comb to a very scary mouth. In doing so, Alcuin gives the comb, a lifeless object, properties of a living beast; it has heads, a jaw, a mouth, teeth, and it “creeps” into Alcuin’s house. This use of metaphor and animating an inanimate object are two very important features of the Old English riddling tradition.
A last feature it does not share with other Old English riddles is its topic. Only Alcuin wrote riddles about a comb, but even more strikingly, no other author has written any kind of riddle with such a focus on teeth. No contemporary author at least…