Things Your Persona Might Have Known
The Wheel of Fortune
by Nicolaa de Bracton of Leicester
O Fortunevelut Moon
statu variabilis
semper crescis
aut decrescis;
vita detestabilis
nunc obdurat
hardet tunc curat
ludo mentis aciem
egestatem
potestatem
dissolvit ut glaciem
(Carmina Burana )
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O Fortuna, like the Luna
changeable in state
always waxing
or waning;
detestable life
at one moment
and at the next cares for
the witty games of the mind
poverty
power
it dissolves like ice..
(not the Techno version!)
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Those of you who were observant have probably already guessed the
topic of this month's article. The idea of Fortune and her wheel was
one of the most pervasive ideas throughout the Middle Ages. I thought
I'd give a little background on this idea and show you a few places
where it pops up.
The idea of Fortune's wheel is quite old and seems to have
originated with the classical philosophers. Cicero seems to have
particularly liked the metaphor. But its influence in the Middle Ages
can betraced mostly to the Consolation of Philosophy of the late
Roman philosopher Boethius. This book has been called "the
influential book in the Middle Ages other than the Bible". Boethius'
writings, contained here and in a few other works, were for years the
only source known to medieval people for the ideas of the Greek
philosophers. Even after the influx of Latin translations of
Aristotle (often via Arabic translations of the Greek) in the twelfth
century, Boethius' works continued to be influential, particularly
for the elite lay people who wanted to learn of philosophy.
When Boethius wrote the Consolation, he was in prison accused of
treason. This had followed a stellar career at the court of Theoderic
the Great, which had won him great renown as statesman, orator, and
scholar. He had made a brilliant marriage, and his sons had been made
consuls, the greatest honor a Roman could hope to attain. But the
advisors of the aging king had used Theoderic's uneasiness over the
future of his kingdom to accuse a number of their enemies of working
to subvert his rule. Boethius was one of these. Suddenly his
brilliant career is in tatters, and so he sits in prison raging
against Fortune.
He is comforted by the spirit of Philosophy, who tells him that
the greatest gifts are not due to Fortune, but to other forces, such
as the laws of God and nature. Fortune's gifts are fleeting and may
be withdrawn at any time, because that is her nature. Holding an
office will not make an man better, for instance, because "...honour
is not accorded to virtue because of the office held, but to the
office because of the virtue of the holder". Those who pin their
hopes on Fortune should always realize the risk they take. In
describing Fortune, Boethius (speaking through Philosophy) provides
us with a very visual description of the turning of the wheel:
"Inconstancy is my very essence; it is the game I never cease
to play as I turn my wheel in its ever changing circle, filled with
joy as I bring the top to the bottom and the bottom to the top. Yes,
rise up on my wheel if you like, but don't count it an injury when by
the same token you begin to fall, as the rules of the game will
require."
Depictions of the Wheel in literature in the Middle Ages abound,
from the Romance of the Rose to Chaucer, to name just a couple.
Dante's Inferno has this to say:
No mortal power may stay her spinning wheel.
The nations rise and fall by her decree.
None may foresee where she will set her heel:
she passes, and things pass. Man's mortal reason
cannot encompass her. She rules her sphere
as the other gods rule theirs. Season by season
her changes change her changes endlessly,
and those whose turn has come press on her so,
she must be swift by hard necessity.
(Inferno VII 82-90)
The famous 13th century text of the Carmina Burana quoted above is
just another example of this phenomenon.
Illustrations of Fortune's Wheel in various texts are also common.
Earlier conceptions of the wheel seem to depict a globe on which
Fortune stands, turning it with her feet. However, in about the
twelfth century this evolves into a depiction of Fortune standing
beside a mechanical wheel which she controls with a lever. On the
wheel are depicted (usually) four figures: one at the top, one at the
bottom, one rising, and one falling. These figures often wear the
guise of kings. The metaphor became so popular during the latter
twelfth and thirteenth centuries that it made it into the iconography
of the cathedral, culminating in the great rose wheel windows of many
cathedrals, which were essentially based on the idea of Fortune's
wheel. The image was a favorite of Henry III of England (who
apparently spent too much time dwelling on higher things), to name
just one noble who was mindful of the idea.
The Wheel served to remind people, particularly nobles who were
seen as being the most susceptible to the sin of ambition and the
wiles of Fortune, of the temporality of earthly things. Far better
for one to aspire to higher things--God and his divinely-inspired
philosophy, as Boethius eventually concludes in the Consolation; for
these things are untouched by Fortune's waxing and waning. Boethius
was later executed on grounds of treason; his wheel had indeed come
full circle. But the medieval readers of Boethius saw victory, not
defeat, in his life and his final rejection of the wiles of
Fortune.
I think the metaphor can be useful to us in a number of ways. Not
only does it help us get into a medieval mindset, but it can help
remind us that the important things in life come from within, that
hard work has its own merits. An award, an office, a title--these are
not the things that make for greatness, though a worthy person
holding one of these can enhance its glory. Riding the Wheel of
Fortune can still be dangerous.
Copyright 1994 by Susan Carroll-Clark, 53 Thorncliffe Park Dr.
#611, Toronto, Ontario M4H 1L1 CANADA. Permission granted for
republication in SCA-related publications, provided author is
credited and receives a copy.