The Well as Symbol - 1
by Roy Fry & Tristan Gray Hulse
The Well or spring,
irrespective of individual associated structures, cults, or legends, relating to actual
examples, is a powerful symbol in its own right, and as such is used universally. Symbols
being by nature both multivalent and ambiguous, the exact impact of any particular example
of the well-as-symbol can be decided only by exploration of the context in which it
appears. In the Middle Ages in Europe, there developed a devotional cult of the Five
Wounds of the crucified Christ. One expression of this cult was to consider the Five
Wounds as so many wells, the endless springing water from unknown depths symbolising
the eternal outflowing of God's unfathomable love, as expressed in the wounds acquired by
Christ during
His self-sacrifice on the cross.
Occasionally images of the wound-wells were used as amulets, intended to enable the wearer
to avail himself of this outpouring of grace. One fine English example is the Coventry
Ring, a gold finger-ring now preserved in the British Museum (see illustration). This
shows an image of Christ, of the iconographic type known as the 'Image of Pity', and
images of the Five Wounds. Inscriptions give the 'names' of the wounds: 'the well of
confort', 'the well of gracy [grace]', the well of pitty', 'the well of merci'. Christ's
side-wound (devotion to which ultimately gave rise to the cult of the Sacred Heart, which
also used well-symbolism extensively) is called 'the well of evver lastingh lyffe'.
Text & Illustration © Roy Fry & Tristan Gray Hulse (1994)
Designed & Maintained by Richard L. Pederick (© 1999) | Created 15/11/99