This is one of the very few texts which let us see how life was really
lived in monasteries in the early Middle Ages. Written in Old English
and preserved in a manuscript of the mid-eleventh century, it consists
of 127 signs used by Anglo-Saxon monks during times when the Benedictine
Rule forbade them to speak. These indicate the food the monks ate, the
clothes they wore, and the books they used in church and chapter, as
well as the tools they used in their daily life, and persons they might
meet both in the monastery and outside. The text is printed here with a
parallel translation. The introduction gives a summary of the
background, both historical and textual, as well as a brief look at the
later evidence for monastic sign language in England. Extensive notes
provide details of textual relationships, explore problems of
interpretation, and set out the historical implications of the text.