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See also: Vie Seint Edmund le Rey' Denis Pyramus says she was one of the most popular of authors with See also: counts, barons and knights, but especially with ladies
.
She is also mentioned by the See also: anonymous author of the Couronnement Renart
.
Her See also: lays were translated into See also: Norwegian 2 by See also: order of See also: Haakon IV.; and See also: Thomas Chestre, who is generally supposed to have lived in the reign of
See also: Henry VI., gave a version of Lanval.3 Very little is known about her
See also: history, and until comparatively recently the very century in which she lived remained a See also: matter of dispute
.
In spite of her own statement in the See also: epilogue to her fables: " See also: Marie ai num, si suis de
'See also: Cotton MS
.
Domit
.
A xi
.
(See also: British Museum), edited for the Rolls Series by Thomas See also: Arnold in 1892
.
2 Edited by R
.
Keyser and C
.
R
.
Unger as Strengleikar e5a Lio3Sabok ( See also: Christiania, 1850)
.
3 Chestre's See also: Sir Launfalwas printed by J
.
See also: Ritson in See also: Ancient See also: English Metrical Romances (1802) ; and by L
.
Erling (See also: Kempten, 1883)
.
See also: France," generally interpreted to mean that Marie was a native of the Ile de France, she seems to have been of Norman origin, and certainly spent most of her See also: life in See also: England
.
Her language, however, shows little trace of Anglo-Norman provincialism
.
Like See also: Wace, she used a See also: literary dialect which probably differed very widely from See also: common Norman speech
.
The See also: manuscripts in which Marie's poems are preserved date from the See also: late 13th or even the 14th century, but the language fixes the date of the poems in the second See also: half of the 12th century
.
The Lais are dedicated to an unknown See also: king, who is identified as Henry II. of England; and the fables, her Ysopet, were written according to the Epilogus for a Count
See also: William, generally recognized to be William Longsword,
See also: earl of See also: Salisbury
.
The author of Couronnement Renart, says that Marie had dedicated her poem to the count William to whom the unknown poet addresses himself
.
This is William of Dampierre (d
.
1251), the See also: husband of the countess See also: Margaret of See also: Flanders, and his See also: identification with Marie's count William is almost certainly an error
.
Marie lived and wrote at the See also: court of Henry II., which was very literary and purely French
.
See also: Queen Eleanor was a Provencal, and belonged to a See also: family in which the patronage of See also: poetry was a tradition
.
There is no evidence to show whether Marie was of See also: noble origin or simply pursued the profession of a See also: trouvere for her living
.
The origin of the lais has been the subject of much discussion
.
Marie herself says that she had heard them sung by See also: Breton minstrels
.
It seems probable that it is the lesser or French See also: Brittany from which the stories were derived, though something may be due to Welsh and Cornish See also: sources
.
Gaston See also: Paris (Romania, vol. xv.) maintained that Marie had heard the stories from English minstrels, who had assimilated the See also: Celtic legends
.
In any See also: case the Breton lays offer abundant evidence of traditions from Scandinavian and See also: Oriental sources
.
The Guigemar of Marie de France presents marked analogies with the ordinary Oriental See also: romance of escape from a See also: harem, for instance, with details superadded from classical See also: mythology
.
Marie seems to have contented herself with giving new literary See also: form to the stories she heard by turning them into Norman octosyllabic verse, and apparently made few See also: radical changes from her originals
.
See also: Joseph Bedier thinks that the lays of the Breton minstrels were See also: prose recitals interspersed with See also: short lyrics something after the manner of the cante-See also: fable of Aucassin et Nicolette
.
Marie's task was to give these cante-fables a narrative form destined to be read rather than sung or recited
.
The Lais which may be definitely attributed to Marie are: Guigemar, Equitan, Le Freene, Le Bisclavret (the werewolf), See also: Les Deux amants, Laustic, Chaitivel, Lanval, Le Chevrefeuille, Milon, Yonec and Eliduc
.
The other similar lays are anonymous except the Lai d'Ignaure by Renant and the Lai du See also: cor of Robert Biket, two authors otherwise unknown
.
They vary in length from some twelve thousand lines to about a See also: hundred
.
Le Chevrefeuille, a short See also: episode of the See also: Tristan See also: story, telling how Tristan makes known his presence in the See also: wood to Iseult, is the best known of them all
.
Laustic ° (Le Rossignol) is almost as short and See also: simple
.
In Yonec a mysterious See also: bird visits the lady kept in See also: durance by an old husband, and is turned into a valiant knight
.
The See also: lover is killed by the husband, but in due See also: time is avenged by his son
.
The scene of the story is partly laid in See also: Chester, but the fable in slightly different forms occurs in the folk-See also: lore of many countries.° Lanval ° is a fairy story, and the See also: hero vanishes eventually with his fairy princess to the See also: island of See also: Avallon or Avilion
.
Eliduc is more elaborately planned than any of these, and the See also: action is divided between Exeter and Brittany
.
Here again the story of the See also: man with two brides is not new, but the three characters of the story are so dealt with that each wins the reader's sympathy
.
The resignation of the wife of Eliduc and her reception of the new bride find a parallel in another of the lays,
4 The soi-disant Breton folk-See also: song " See also: Ann Eostik " on the same subject translated by La Villemarque in his Barzaz-Breiz (184o) is rejected by competent authorities
.
Similar stories in which the See also: nightingale is slain by an angry husband occur in Renard contrefait and in the Gesta Romanorum
.
° Cf. the Oiseau bleu of Mme d' Aulnoy . ° Sir Lambewell inSee also: Bishop Percy's Folio MS
.
(ed
.
Hales and Furnivall, vol. ii., 1867), is another version of Lanval, and differs from Chestre's
.
For the relations between Lanval and the Lai de Graelent, wrongly ascribed to Marie by Roquefort, see W
.
H
.
See also: Schofield, " The Lays of Graelent and Lanval, and the story of See also: Wayland," in the Publications of the Mod
.
Lang
.
Assoc. of See also: America, vol. xv
.
(Baltimore, 1900)
.
Le Frene
.
The story is in both cases more human and less repugnant than the, in some respects, similar story of See also: Griselda
.
Marie's Ysopet is translated from an English See also: original which she erroneously attributed to See also: Alfred the See also: Great, who had, she said, translated it from the Latin
.
The collection includes many. fables that have come down from See also: Phaedrus, some Oriental stories derived from Jewish sources, with many popular apologues that belong to the Renard See also: cycle, and differ from those of older origin in that they are intended to amuse rather than to instruct
.
Marie describes the misery of the poor under the feudal regime, but she preaches resignation rather than revolt
.
The popularity of this collection is attested by the twenty-three See also: MSS. of it that have been preserved
.
Another poem attributed to Marie de France is L'Espurgatoire Seint Patriz, a See also: translation from the Tractatus de purgatorio S
.
Patricii (c
.
1185) of See also: Henri de Salterey, which brings her activity down almost to the close of the century
.
See Die Fabeln der Marie de France (1898), edited by Karl Warnke with the help of materials See also: left by Eduard Mall; and Die Lais der Marie de France (2nd ed., 1900), edited by Karl Warnke, with See also: comparative notes by See also: Reinhold Kohler; the two See also: works being vols. vi. and iii. of the Bibliotheca Normannica of Hermann Suchier; also an extremely interesting article by Joseph Beefier in the Revue See also: des deux mondes (Oct
.
1891); another by Alice See also: Kemp-Welch in the Nineteenth Century (Dec
.
1907)
.
For an analysis of the Lais see Revue de philologie franraise, viii
.
161 seq.; Karl Warnke, Die Quellen der Esope der Marie de France (1900)
.
The Lais were first published in 1819 by B. de Roquefort . L'Espurgatoire Seint Patriz was edited by T . A . Jenkins (See also: Philadelphia, 1894)
.
Some of the Lays were paraphrased by Arthur O'Shaughnessy in his Lays of France (1872)
.
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