It’s a rainy autumn morning in New York, which means that Cait just wants to curl up with coffee and a book in her soft pants. Because she got rather festive last night, she might also rest her eyes and enjoy a podcast. You should take her advice.
In “Friends,” Jen and Cait talk about Chapters 10-12 of ADOW. Enjoy!
Thanks to you and your brilliant contributions, we have an episode full of listener feedback for your Sunday. We *love* hearing from you and hope you’ll keep sending us comments, questions, and ideas.
In Episode 2, we discuss rowing, rage, and romance in Chapters 4-6 of A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness.
As you’ll learn at the end of the episode, we plan to handle listener feedback in a separate episode mid-week. Keep your comments coming at @chamomilenclove and chamomileandclovecast@gmail.com. If you like what we do, consider leaving us a review in iTunes!
It’s finally here, y’all! The annual Real-Time Reading for A Discovery of Witches. Today, we meet Diana, the Book, and the Bodleian! We begin today – 18 September – with Chapter 1.
The leather-bound volume was nothing remarkable. To an ordinary historian, it would have looked no different from hundreds of other manuscripts in Oxford’s Bodleian Library, ancient and worn.
Diana
When we meet Diana, the intrepid, willful, intelligent heroine of our story, she’s poring over old manuscripts in the library in order to prepare for an upcoming historical conference. The text tells us that Dr. Bishop is a historian who focuses on the history of science — specifically, on the history of alchemy. In the opening scenes of A Discovery of Witches, Diana confronts a text – Ashmole 782 – which displays curious, magical characteristics. If you’d like to learn more about manuscripts, I
Illustration 3, Rosarium Philosophorum: The King and Queen begin to disrobe and come together. Credit: University of Glasgow Special Collections Department.
In the first chapter, we also learn that Diana comes from a long line of witches in New England.
More important, my life was now my own. No one in my department, not even the historians of early America, connected my last name with that of the first Salem woman executed for witchcraft in 1692.
We get a little more about Diana’s ancestor, Bridget Bishop, later in ADOW, but the text focuses more on her notoreity amongst witches than on her greater historical significance. Bridget Bishop was tried for witchcraft and hanged on June 10, 1692.
Stamped in gilt on the spine was a coat of arms belonging to Elias Ashmole, a seventeenth-century book collector and alchemist whose books and papers had come to the Bodleian from the Ashmolean Museum in the nineteenth century, along with the number 782.
Elias Ashmole (1617-1692) was an English politician, astrologer, and student of alchemy. He both wrote and collected books on alchemy. In his later life, he became a well-known collector of “manuscripts and curiosities.” His collection–bequeathed to the University of Oxford–became the first public museum in England in 1683. Part of the Ashmolean Collection does actually reside in the Bodleian, and you can actually browse some of the manuscripts online. The link will take you to Ashm. 529, Johannes Annius, De futuris Christianorum triumphis in Saracenos. The Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archeology at the University of Oxford has some very fine online collections here.
The Bodleian Library is one of the oldest libraries in Europe, and in Britain is second in size only to the British Library with over 12 million printed items. First opened to scholars in 1602, it incorporates an earlier library built by the University in the 15th century to house books donated by Humfrey, Duke of Gloucester. Since 1602 it has expanded, slowly at first but with increasing momentum over the last 150 years, to keep pace with the ever-growing accumulation of books, papers and other materials, but the core of the old buildings has remained intact.
In her Real-Time Reading Post for 18 September, Deb reveals that she first walked into the Duke Humphrey’s reading room in 1985. Apparently, it made quite the impression on her. The library was built between 1450 and 1480 in order to contain the collection of manuscripts collected by Humphrey of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Gloucester, during his life. You can find more detailed photographs of the interior here.
Duke Humphrey’s Library, as photographed by the Bodleian Blog
You can catch our discussion of Chapters 1-3 of ADOW in our first episode, Vampire Boyfriend, but you should also check out episodes from our fellow podcasters covering the same material:
Chapter 1 was incorporated into Episode 1×01 of A Discovery of Witches TV, which we covered here.
Don’t forget to follow Deb on social media (@DebHarkness on Twitter and Instagram) for more real-time reading updates. In the meantime, you can find us at @chamomilenclove on Twitter or chamomileandclovecast@gmail.com.
We couldn’t stand it any longer. Well, more specifically, I had a bit too much wine and decided that I couldn’t wait to share the first episode with you. Jen, being lovely, generous, and just as excited, let me act on this impulse and publish the episode a week early.
You can find the episode on PodOMatic, and shortly, on iTunes! Tell us what you think by tweeting using the HT #ccalchemy, or e-mail us at chamomileandclovecast@gmail.com.