Structural Arithmetic Metaphor in the Oxford "Roland" Eleanor Webster Buïatkin $8.00 Structural Arithmetic Metaphor in the Oxford "Roland" By Eleanor Webster Bulatkin "Structural arithmetic metaphor" is de fined as an ordering of poetic form according to an arithmetic pattern that uses numbers whose symbolic meaning restates metaphor ically some basic idea inherent in the content of the poem. Although no ars poetica describing the de vice has come down to us, combinations of numbers have, in one way or another, been used in the structuring of literary works (as they have been employed in architectural and musical composition) since classical an tiquity. At some times, they have served sim ply to achieve harmonies and symmetrical proportions; but at others, they have ex pressed symbolic meanings as well. As Mrs. Bulatkin points out, the concep tion of arithmetic structuring and the notion that numbers carry a metaphoric significance are thoroughly consonant with the whole number philosophy of the Middle Ages, itself the product of a tradition of great antiquity. The use of numerical composition has been demonstrated in studies of the Old French poem La Vie de Saint Alexis of 1040 and Dante's Divine Comedy of 1321. The evidence is entirely sufficient to justify the assumption that the practice was known during the pe riod encompassed by these two works, and it is to this era that the Chanson de Roland be longs. (Continued on back flap) Structural Arithmetic Metaphor in the Oxford "Roland" Structural Arithmetic Metaphor in the Oxford "Roland" Eleanor Webster Bulatkin Ohio State University Press Copyright © 1972 by the Ohio State University Press All rights reserved International Standard Book Number: 0-8142-0154-7 Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number: 71-141496 Printed in the United States of America to Iliya ßulatkin Cossack of the Don
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