Quotes from work
Chevrefoil

"Chevrefoil" is a Breton lai by the medieval poet Marie de France. The eleventh poem in the collection called The Lais of Marie de France, its subject is an episode from the romance of Tristan and Iseult. The title means "honeysuckle," a symbol of love in the poem. "Chevrefoil" consists of 118 lines and survives in two manuscripts, Harley 978 or MS H, which contains all the Lais, and in Bibliothèque Nationale, nouv. acq. fr. 1104, or MS S.


Marie de France photo

“The two of them resembled the honeysuckle which clings to the hazel branch: when it has wound itself round and attached itself to the hazel, the two can survive together: but if anyone should then attempt to separate them, the hazel quickly dies, as does the honeysuckle. "Sweet love, so it is with us: without me you cannot survive, nor I without you."”

D'euls deus fu il tut autresi
Cume del chevrefoil esteit
Ki a la codre se perneit:
Quant il s'i est laciez e pris
Ensemble poënt bien durer;
Mes ki puis les volt deservrer,
Li codres muert hastivement
E li chevrefoil ensement.
"Bele amie, si est de nus:
Ne vus sanz mei, ne mei sanz vus!"
"Chevrefoil", line 74; p. 110.
Lais

Similar authors

Marie de France photo
Marie de France 8
medieval poet
Roger Bacon photo
Roger Bacon 21
medieval philosopher and theologian
Saadi photo
Saadi 5
Persian poet
Giovanni Boccaccio photo
Giovanni Boccaccio 27
Italian author and poet
Avicenna photo
Avicenna 8
medieval Persian polymath, physician, and philosopher
Thomas Hardy photo
Thomas Hardy 171
English novelist and poet
Cædmon photo
Cædmon 3
Ancient English poet
Walther von der Vogelweide photo
Walther von der Vogelweide 18
Middle High German lyric poet
Hafez photo
Hafez 4
Persian poet
Ferdowsi photo
Ferdowsi 3
Persian poet