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The Lays of Marie de France: VI. The Two Lovers

The Lays of Marie de France
VI. The Two Lovers
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Foreword
  3. The Lays of Marie de France
    1. Prologue
    2. I. Guigemar
    3. II. Equitan
    4. III. Le Fresne
    5. IV. Bisclavret
    6. V. Lanval
    7. VI. The Two Lovers
    8. VII. Yonec
    9. VIII. Laüstic
    10. IX. Milun
    11. X. Chaitivel
    12. XI. Chevrefoil
    13. XII. Eliduc
  4. For Further Reading

VI. The Two Lovers

This happened in Normandy many years

ago, a story to call forth tears

of sympathy from those who care

for lovers: this unfortunate pair

died for love. And even today

the Bretons tell their tale in a lay

they call “The Two Lovers,” and I

shall tell it to you or, anyway, try.

There is in Neustria (which we call

Normany now) a mountain, tall

and beetling, where two lovers lie.

On one side of the mountain, the high

lord of the Pistrians built a town

he called Pîtres, which has come down

to our own time, and you can see

the walls of the houses and buildings he

erected, and we still refer

to the Valley of Pîtres. Living there

with the king was his beautiful daughter, who

had brought him joy and comfort, too,

since the death of her mother, the queen.

Possessive, as some fathers have been

as widowers, this ruler went

to great lengths to try to prevent

young men from seeking his daughter’s hand.

He proclaimed throughout the kingdom that she

could marry no man unless he

was able to carry her in his arms

up the mountain beyond the farms

that loomed up into the sky.

Many young men came to try

but not even the strongest could

get more than halfway up. They would

sooner or later put her down

and, ashamed of themselves, return to town.

After a time there were fewer and still

fewer who came to try, until

it seemed that her father’s plan had been clever

and that she would remain unwed forever.

There was in that country a young son

of a count, noble and handsome, one

who strove to excel and gain prestige.

He came to the court to visit his liege

and fell in love with the daughter whom he

courted, addressing her ardently.

She found him engaging and thinking of

her poor chances of married love

because of her father’s arbitrary

rules, she chose to do the very

thing most fathers fear and gave

her love to the young man who was brave

enough to agree to conceal their connection

and any signs of their affection.

They loved each other deeply, but this

having to hide it diminished their bliss

and tested the young man’s limited patience.

After a number of awkward occasions

when they had almost been found out

he came to her to speak about

elopement. They could run away.

The alternative was that they could stay

and he would have to try to carry

her up the mountain so they could marry.

He was afraid that he would fail

in this attempt but did not prevail,

for she answered him that if they were

to flee, her father, missing her

would be in torment and misery

for which she would be responsible. She

had another idea — she had

an aunt in Salerno. rich, half-mad,

but of great skill in medical lore,

familiar with herbs and the uses for

various roots. “You’ll have from me

a letter that will explain how we

need her assistance. She will make

potions and pastes for you to take

that will increase your strength until

you can succeed, as I know you will,

in carrying me to the very peak

of the mountain, as you must do to seek

my hand.” The young man now had cause

for hope and his demeanor was

transformed. The next day at dawn

he said goodbye and he was gone.

He returned home for money and clothes,

pack horses, servants, and all of those

things one needs for a journey. From there

he went on to Salerno where

the aunt lived. He gave her the note,

which she read through (I need not quote

the text). She then put into her mixer

all the ingredients for an elixir

for strength as well as endurance. He

tried it and it worked. So she

put some into a vessel he could

take back with him. He made good

time and soon arrived at the court

where he settled in and then in short

order asked the king for his

daughter. His majesty smiled at this,

thinking how many burly men

had tried and failed. Cheerfully, then,

he gave his permission. She, meanwhile,

had been preparing for this trial,

eating nothing so as to weigh

as little as possible on that day.

She also wore a gauzy shift

that would be no added burden to lift.

The king summoned the gentry and

the commoners throughout the land

to come and see the candidate

for his daughter’s hand who would demonstrate

his strength in the now conventional way.

As the king presented his daughter they

all applauded. Before the trial

the young man handed her the phial

containing the potion for her to hold.

(Of the power of its contents he’d told

her long before.) At the bank of the Seine

the young man lifted her up and then

began the climb and ascended to

the halfway point. From her he drew

great happiness and courage. She

urged him to drink from the phial, but he

said that he felt strong and had no

need for the medicine yet to go

on. Besides I do not desire

to let them see me stopping. Higher

up, perhaps, when I cannot go

three steps more, I shall let you know,

and then I’ll drink.” Two-thirds of the way

to the top, in pain, he heard her say,

“Stop, my love. You are tired, I think.

This is the moment when you should drink

the potion.” But he took no heed of

her offer, relying only on love

to get him to the peak. In vain

she offered again, and he, in pain,

refused and trudged on to the top,

which he did reach — only to stop,

totter, and fall, never to move

again. They terrified maiden strove

to revive him. She held the phial to his lips

and urged him to take little sips

but he could not speak. He had no breath,

and this she recognized as death.

The heart he had given her had tried

too hard and broken, and he had died.

She wailed and moaned and threw away

the potion in a circular spray

(wherever drops of it touched the ground

shepherds say that flowers abound).

What then of the girl? She lay down beside

the body of the man and cried,

took him in her arms to embrace,

kissed his eyelids, lips, and face.

Her heart, too, broke in its woe

and she stopped breathing, dead also.

Below, the king grew worried, waiting

for them to return, and, hesitating

only a little climbed to discover

his daughter dead with her dead lover.

He fainted but recovered to weep

at what had happened and to keep

a three-day vigil there on the crest

of the mountain. Then, at his behest,

a marble sarcophagus was made

into which the bodies were laid.

Because of what happened there it was named

the Mountain of Two Lovers. The famed

couple are thus celebrated

by the Breton lay I have just narrated.

Annotate

Next Chapter
VII. Yonec
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