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- Linquo_coax_ranis abstract "Linquo coax ranis are the first words of a two-line poem in internally rhymed hexameters by Serlo of Wilton. The complete text is:Linquo coax ranis, cras corvis, vanaque vanis;Ad logicam pergo que mortis non timet ergo.I leave croaking to frogs, crowing to crows, and vanity to the vain;I now go to the logic that does not fear the \"therefore\" of death. Attached to the poem is a story (which may be compared with the razós attached to certain Occitan poems of the 12th and 13th centuries). The earliest known version of the story, in Latin, forms part of a manuscript collection, Liber narrationum de diversis visionibus et miraculis, which itself is part of MS. Troyes 946 from the Abbey of Clairvaux collection. This version was written at some date after 1173, when Serlo became abbot of L'Aumône, and before 1184, the date of his death.According to the story, one of Serlo's disciples, who had died young, appeared to him in a vision. He was wearing a parchment cape covered with writing: on it were written all the sophistries of scholastic philosophy. The disciple told Serlo that the cape was painfully heavy and burning hot. Serlo reached out to touch his disciple, and withdrew his hand hastily, scalded by a drop of burning sweat. After seeing this vision, Serlo \"converted\", spoke these memorable lines, entered the Cistercian Order, and eventually became abbot of l'Aumône.The legend was investigated by the French novelist and philologist Marcel Schwob in his pamphlet La légende de Serlon de Wilton (Paris, 1899).".
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageID "8633076".
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageLength "1811".
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageOutDegree "11".
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageRevisionID "544634725".
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Category:12th-century_medieval_Latin_literature.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_legends.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Cistercians.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Clairvaux_Abbey.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink LAumxc3xb4ne.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Leonine_verse.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Marcel_Schwob.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Razo.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Serlo_of_Wilton.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLink Troyes.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageWikiLinkText "Linquo coax ranis".
- Linquo_coax_ranis wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Linquo_coax_ranis subject Category:12th-century_medieval_Latin_literature.
- Linquo_coax_ranis subject Category:Medieval_legends.
- Linquo_coax_ranis hypernym Words.
- Linquo_coax_ranis type Book.
- Linquo_coax_ranis type Book.
- Linquo_coax_ranis comment "Linquo coax ranis are the first words of a two-line poem in internally rhymed hexameters by Serlo of Wilton. The complete text is:Linquo coax ranis, cras corvis, vanaque vanis;Ad logicam pergo que mortis non timet ergo.I leave croaking to frogs, crowing to crows, and vanity to the vain;I now go to the logic that does not fear the \"therefore\" of death. Attached to the poem is a story (which may be compared with the razós attached to certain Occitan poems of the 12th and 13th centuries).".
- Linquo_coax_ranis label "Linquo coax ranis".
- Linquo_coax_ranis sameAs Q547415.
- Linquo_coax_ranis sameAs Linquo_coax_ranis.
- Linquo_coax_ranis sameAs Linquo_coax_ranis.
- Linquo_coax_ranis sameAs m.027bv27.
- Linquo_coax_ranis sameAs Q547415.
- Linquo_coax_ranis wasDerivedFrom Linquo_coax_ranis?oldid=544634725.
- Linquo_coax_ranis isPrimaryTopicOf Linquo_coax_ranis.