close this bookThe Honeysuckle and the Hazel Tree
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View the documentPreface and Acknowledgments
View the documentIntroduction
View the document1. Philomena
View the document2. The Nighingale
View the document3. The Two Lovers
View the document4. Honeysuckle
View the document5. Lanval
View the document6. Eliduc
View the document7. The Reflection
View the document8. The Chatelaine of Vergi

4. Honeysuckle

4. Honeysuckle

(Chevrefoil)

Marie de France


This lai, a favorite of mine,
Was named for the honeysuckle vine
And written to commemorate
4 The incident which I'll relate.
Many times I've had the chance
To hear or read the old romance
Of Tristan and the queen, who were
8 So true to love and to each other
And who, for their love, were sorely tried
Until, on a single day, they died.

Tristan, by King Mark's command,
12 Was exiled back to his own land
When, furious, the king had seen
The love he bore Iseut, the queen.
He stayed in South Wales for a year
16 And all that time did not appear
At court. But then, in his despair,
He couldn't bring himself to care
What might happen if he went back;
20 It was better to risk death than lack
The one thing that counted in his eyes.
This shouldn't cause anyone surprise-”
A lover grieves and broods that way
24 If he is true and far away
From the lady who has won his heart,
And that's why Tristan had to start
For Cornwall. Whatever that could mean,
28 At least he was sure to see the queen.
He went through the forest, all alone,
So that his presence would not be known.
When evening came, it seemed all right
32 To seek some shelter for the night.
From poor peasants whom he met
He took what lodging he could get,
And asked if they knew anything
36 About the intentions of the king.
They told him that by King Mark's decree
The barons who owed him fealty
Had all been summoned forth to ride
40 To Tintagel, where at Whitsuntide[1]
The king intended to hold his court.
There would be feasting and good sport;
The queen was going to be there too.

44 Tristan was overjoyed. He knew
That for the journey she would make
There was just one road the queen could take.
As soon as the king was on his way,
48 Tristan went into the woods to stay
Close to the road where he could meet
The queen as she passed by with her suite.
Meanwhile, he cut down and squared
52 A hazel branch. When it was pared,
He signed it, using his knife to write,[2]
And placed the signal well in sight.
The queen would never fail to notice,
56 Alert for such a sign as this-”
They had used it in another case
To indicate a meeting place-”
And so the message would be clear;
60 She'd know her friend was somewhere near.
Earlier, he had sent a letter.
This is what he wrote to her:[3]
In the forest, where he had to hide,
64 He'd waited a long time to decide
How best to find her, where and when
They might see each other once again.
He could no longer live that way,
68 Cut off from the one he loved, for they
Were like the honeysuckle vine,
Which around a hazel tree will twine,
Holding the trunk as in a fist
72 And climbing until its tendrils twist
Around the top and hold it fast.
Together tree and vine will last.
But then, if anyone should pry
76 The vine away, they both will die.
"My love, we're like that vine and tree;
I'll die without you, you without me"

The queen, as she rode along the way,
80 Was waiting for something to betray
The presence of her friend, and spied
The hazel stick on a slope beside
The road. Understanding what it meant,
84 She called to those knights present
To be her escort, and expressed
A wish to stop a while and rest;
The traveling had made her tired.
88 The knights did as she desired,
And waited there while she withdrew
Alone, except for one she knew
Would keep her secret, the faithful maid
92 Brangene. After a while they strayed
Off the road and into the forest.
There was the one the queen loved best
In all the world, waiting for her.
96 Great was their joy at being together,
With time to talk again at leisure.
She told him that King Mark's displeasure
Had changed to grief at having exiled
100 Tristan; they'd soon be reconciled.
The king was sure he'd been deceived
By slander he should not have believed.
But when it was time for her to go,
104 Both of them wept in bitter sorrow.
Tristan went back to Wales and waited
Until he had been reinstated.

Because he wanted to express
108 The overwhelming happiness
Of being with his love once more,
What he had written to her before
And her words to him, not to forget,[4]
112 Tristan, a skilled harpist, set
To music. I will quickly say[5]
How people referred to this new lai:
Gotelef in English (which became
116 "Honeysuckle") translates the name
Chevrefoil. Here I've related
Just what the lai commemorated.

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