ADSO’S MANUSCRIPT IS DIVIDED INTO SEVEN DAYS, AND EACH DAY INTO periods corresponding to the liturgical hours. The subtitles, in the third person, were probably added by Vallet. But since they are helpful in orienting the reader, and since this usage is also not unknown to much of the vernacular literature of the period, I did not feel it necessary to eliminate them.
Adso’s references to the canonical hours caused me some puzzlement, because their meaning varied according to the place and the season; moreover, it is entirely probable that in the fourteenth century the instructions given by Saint Benedict in the Rule were not observed with absolute precision.
Nevertheless, as a guide to the reader, the following schedule is, I believe, credible. It is partly deduced from the text and partly based on a comparison of the original Rule with the description of monastic life given by Edouard Schneider in Les Heures bénédictines (Paris, Grasset, 1925).
Matins | (which Adso sometimes refers to by the older expression “Vigiliae”) Between 2:30 and 3:00 in the morning. |
Lauds | (which in the most ancient tradition were called “Matutini” or “Matins”) Between 5:00 and 6:00 in the morning, in order to end at dawn. |
Prime | Around 7:30, shortly before daybreak. |
Terce | Around 9:00. |
Sext | Noon (in a monastery where the monks did not work in the fields, it was also the hour of the midday meal in winter). |
Nones | Between 2:00 and 3:00 in the afternoon. |
Vespers | Around 4:30, at sunset (the Rule prescribes eating supper before dark). |
Compline | Around 6:00 (before 7:00, the monks go to bed). |
The calculation is based on the fact that in northern Italy at the end of November, the sun rises around 7:30 A.M. and sets around 4:40 P.M.