Perceforest

Perceforest or Le Roman de Perceforest is an anonymous prose romance, with lyrical interludes of poetry, that describes a fictional origin of Great Britain and provides an original Genesis of the Arthurian World. The lengthy work in six books takes its inspiration from Geoffrey of Monmouth, Wace, Orosius, Bede, the Lancelot-Grail, the Alexander Romance, Roman historians, medieval travelers, and oral tradition.[1] It appears to have originally been composed in French in the Low Countries between 1330 and 1345, although the most complete version of the four extant texts, Manuscript C, written by David Aubert around 1459–1460, is generally accepted as a revision made for Philippe le Bon, Duke of Burgundy." However, a 2013 analysis by Christine Ferlampin-Acher proposes an alternative hypothesis that Manuscript C is, in fact, the original.[2] In any case, Perceforest forms a late addition to the collection of narratives with loose connections both to the Arthurian cycle and the feats of Alexander the Great.

Plot

An extract from Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain serves as a preface in which refugees fled the destruction of Troy land. They went to the island of Britain established a new kingdom. Unlike in Geoffrey's narrative, however, that dynasty eventually produces a series of weak rulers who usher their kingdom into decline.

Alexander of Macedon and his Greek forces are on their way to the coronation of India's new king when they are blown off course in a storm. They arrive in Britain and discover the poor state of the country. Alexander has taken charge and appoints the brothers Betis and Gadifer as kings of England and Scotland, respectively. He then leaves for Babylon. Betis makes a name for himself, "Perceforest," by daring to "pierce" and "purge" the evil forest to root out Darnant the Enchanter and bring freedom and justice to the land. Perceforest and Gadifer has taken on Darnant's descendants, a group of magic-wielding knights, and drive them out. The successful leadership of the two brothers did not last; psychological and physical calamities dimmed their capabilities. Native English and Scottish knights are being forced to step into the breach in quelling rebellion and fending off invasion.

Perceforest eventually regains his powers and, as king of Britain, creates a chivalric society. Specifically he founds the Franc Palais of free equals with the best knights, paralleling the Round Table. "Thus the romance would trace back the model of ideal civilization that it proposes, a model also for the orders of chivalry created from the 14th century onwards, to a legendary origin where the glory of Alexander is united with the fame of Arthur."[3] King Perceforest also abandons polytheism in favor of a monotheistic god and, under the influence of the hermit Dardanon, advances a new religion that will serve as a transition toward Arthurian Christianity. Meanwhile, Perceforest's knights, often with the help of a guardian spirit named Zephir, engage in heroic and romantic acts of daring-do in Britain as well as in the Low Countries. Tragedy comes to prevail as Perceforest's eldest son becomes infatuated with a Roman girl, whose treachery enables Julius Caesar to launch an invasion in which Perceforest and all his forces are annihilated and the kingdom is utterly destroyed."[4]

The third generation had come to restore the land. Ourseau, a grandson of Gadifer, secures the assassination of Julius Caesar. Another grandson, Gallafur, marries Alexander's granddaughter, the "Maiden of Dragons," to give Britain a new royal house. Gallafur also embeds the sword in the stone that one of his descendants will draw out to become king. And it is Gallafur who casts out many of the enchantments that still plague Britain. Nonetheless, tragedy triumphs a final time in this work, as Britain is invaded by the Sicambrians, a group of Trojans. They destroy Alexander's Greek dynasty, leaving a void that only the coming of Arthur will fill. An elaborate frame story tells how the "Greek" manuscript was discovered by count William of Hainault in a cabinet at “Burtimer” Abbey; in the same cabinet was deposited a crown, which the count sent to king Edward.

Printing history and translations

Perceforest was first printed in Paris in 1528, as La Tres Elegante Delicieux Melliflue et Tres Plaisante Hystoire du Tres Noble Roy Perceforest in four volumes. In 1531 it was printed in Italian. A Spanish translation is also known. An 800-page partial abridged English translation/precis appeared in 2011.[5]

Reception at various points in history

According to the Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales, "it was read in France, and in northern Germany was performed as a pre-Lenten Shrove Tuesday drama in the mid-1400s." Charles IX of France was especially fond of this romance: four volumes of Perceforest were added to the Royal library at Blois sometime between 1518 and 1544, and were shelved with the Arthurian romances.[6] The romance was known and referred to in 14th-century England.

Perceforest, like other late Gothic romances, was vaguely remembered but largely unread until the late 20th century. This was due not only to its time period but to its length. Each of its six books runs as many pages as a long novel and the whole work is divided into about 530 chapters totaling over a million words.[7] If completely translated into English the work would run about 7,000 pages.[8] Therefore, it was earlier and High Medieval literature that took center stage in modern medieval studies.

Moreover, readers of the Age of Enlightenment were not always delighted with Perceforest when they came upon it. The hero of Matthew Lewis's The Monk (1796),[9] an early example of the Gothic novel, confesses that

"Donna Rodolpha's Library was principally composed of old Spanish Romances: These were her favourite studies, and once a day one of these unmerciful Volumes was put regularly into my hands. I read the wearisome adventures of 'Perceforest,' 'Tirante the White,' 'Palmerin of England,' and 'the Knight of the Sun,' till the Book was on the point of falling from my hands through Ennui."

Gérard de Nerval, in a fictional letter published as part of his Angélique (1850), tells of an antiquary who fears for the safety of the valuable first printed edition of Perceforest at the hands of a rioting mob.

References

  1. Nigel Bryant (translator), Perceforest: The Prehistory of King Arthur's Britain, Cambridge and Rochester: D.S. Brewer (Arthurian studies, 77), 2011, xxiii.
  2. Laura J. Campbell, "‘Perceforest’ et ‘Zéphir’: propositions autour d'un récit arthurien bourguignon," French Studies, Volume 67, Issue 1, January 2013, Pages 86–87.
  3. Mihaela Voicu, Histoire de la littérature française du moyen âge, xii.1, Bucharest, 2003 e-text (in French), 2014
  4. Nigel Bryant (translator), A Perceforest Reader: Selected Episodes from Perceforest: The Prehistory of Arthur's Britain, Cambridge: D.S.Brewer, 2012, in the section "The Story."
  5. Bryant, Nigel (2011). Perceforest: The Prehistory of King Arthur's Britain. D.S. Brewer. ISBN 978-1-84384-262-0.
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 26, 2000. Retrieved 2005-01-31.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  7. Nigel Bryant (translator), Perceforest: The Prehistory of King Arthur's Britain, Cambridge and Rochester: D.S. Brewer (Arthurian studies, 77), 2011, xxiii.
  8. "Arthurian Legends". www.ampltd.co.uk. Retrieved 2019-06-18.
  9. Matthew Lewis, The Monk, Vol. II, Chapter 1.
  • Myriam Yvonne Jehenson, "Quixotic Desires or Stark Reality?", the "Sleeping Beauty" episode mentioned.
  • Dr Helen Nicholson, "What was a Medieval woman?", includes excerpts.
  • Gilles Roussineau, Le Roman de Perceforest, 2001, ISBN 2-600-00620-6. Roussineau identified the Perceforest origins of "Sleeping Beauty" in "Tradition Littéraire et Culture Populaire dans L'Histoire de Troilus et de Zellandine (Perceforest, Troisième partie): Version Ancienne du Conte de la Belle au Bois Dormant," in Arthuriana (Spring 1994): pp30 – 45.
  • Mihaela Voicu, Histoire de la littérature française du moyen âge, xii.1, Bucharest, 2003 e-text (in French)
  • Les pièces lyriques du roman de Perceforest, éd. Jeanne Lods, Genève, Droz (Publications romanes et françaises, 36), 1953
  • Le roman de Perceforest, Première partie, éd. Jane H. M. Taylor, Genève, Droz (Textes littéraires français, 279), 1979,
  • Perceforest, Quatrième partie, tome I, éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz (Textes littéraires français, 343), 1987
  • Perceforest. Troisième partie, tome I, éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz (Textes littéraires français, 365), 1988
  • Perceforest. Troisième partie, tome II, éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz (Textes littéraires français, 409), 1991
  • Perceforest. Troisième partie, tome III, éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz (Textes littéraires français, 434), 1993
  • Perceforest. Deuxième partie, tome I, éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz (Textes littéraires français, 506), 1999
  • Perceforest. Deuxième partie, tome II, éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz (Textes littéraires français, 540), 2001
  • Perceforest. Première partie, éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz (Textes Littéraires Français, 592), 2007, 2 tomes (ISBN 978-2-600-01133-4)
  • Perceforest,Cinquième partie, éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz, 2012, 2 t., CLXXII-1328p.
  • Perceforest,Sixième partie,éd. Gilles Roussineau, Genève, Droz, 2014, 2t., 1428 p.
  • Ms C: Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal 3483-3494

Further reading

  • Roussineau, Gilles. "Tradition Littéraire Et Culture Populaire Dans L'Histoire De Troïlus Et De Zellandine ("Perceforest", Troisième Partie), Version Ancienne Du Conte De La Belle Au Bois Dormant." Arthuriana 4, no. 1 (1994): 30-45. Accessed June 26, 2020. www.jstor.org/stable/27869044.
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