Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Roman de Silence
Roman de Silence | Sarah Roche-Mahdi, Heldris (de Cornulle.)
4 posts | 3 read | 3 to read
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Graywacke
Roman de Silence | Sarah Roche-Mahdi, Heldris (de Cornulle.)
post image
Pickpick

🤫 don‘t wake Nikki.

This is a delightful 13-century Arthurian romance with a female knight, Silence, forced to hide her identity and act a man. Jealous kings, slain dragons, female healers and a wild-man version of Merlin. It was discovered in 1911, a single manuscript in Old French verse in a box marked “old papers - no value”.

dabbe 🖤🐾🖤 4mo
Leftcoastzen 👏😻 4mo
55 likes2 stack adds2 comments
blurb
Dilara
Roman de Silence | Sarah Roche-Mahdi, Heldris (de Cornulle.)
post image

Romance written in the 12-13th cent.
Silence is a girl brought up disguised as a boy so she could be her parents' heir. Of course, they are the most valiant, accomplished & virtuous person ever 😁
The King of England likes & values them, but after they reject the Queen's advances, she turns against them & tribulations start.
I thought their gender of birth would be uncovered in battle, as per trope, but no: something stranger & funnier happens 👏

Dilara It's short and not without humour, and very much inspired by Le roman de la rose and Arthurian lore. Just like in Le roman de la rose, there is a lot of casual of misogyny & reflections on the Nature vs Culture debate.
The original is in Old French octosyllabic verse; the version I read is in modern French prose that still retains a medieval flavour.

Picture is a miniature of Joan of Arc, so a couple of centuries later than the book
(edited) 4mo
Graywacke Fantastic! I thoroughly enjoyed the English prose translation. But the misogyny was striking. 4mo
Dilara @Graywacke I enjoyed it too! The misogyny was inevitable, given the date of writing, but at least, we weren't repeatedly hit over the head with it like we were in Le roman de la rose 😁 4mo
Graywacke @Dilara ha! True. Have you read the Lais of Mary of France? Similar style (in English prose translation) 4mo
Dilara @Graywacke I read a couple and I can see the similarities. I even read one translated into English verse in The Penguin Book of Women Poets 😁 (Chievrefueil/Chèvrefeuille, or “honeysuckle“ in modern English, translated literally as “Goat's-leaf“ in the version I read). I mean to read them all at some point 😚

“Wrathful was King Mark,
Angry with Tristan his nephew,
Banished him from the realm
For the love he bore the Queen.“
4mo
34 likes1 stack add5 comments
blurb
Dilara
Roman de Silence | Sarah Roche-Mahdi, Heldris (de Cornulle.)
post image

So far:
- Hébain married the King of Norway's daughter
- Cador slayed the dragon terrorising Winchester, and earned the right to marry the maid of his choosing
- Eufémie cured Cador's illness and earned the right to marry the man of her choosing
- You guessed it: Cador and Eufémie married each other
- Eufémie gave birth to a girl, but they announced a boy - and therefore heir - to the world
Medieval romances FTW!
I'll stop bc spoilers 😋

25 likes1 stack add
blurb
Graywacke
Roman de Silence | Sarah Roche-Mahdi, Heldris (de Cornulle.)
post image

Now that I‘ve finished Chaucer, I‘ve made the Roman de Silence my morning book. This is a 13th century Old French Arthurian romance in verse. And so far, in translation, it reads a lot like the Lais of Marie de France - that is to say, light and charming.

Texreader 🐈‍⬛❤️ 5mo
Suet624 Impressive 5mo
dabbe 🖤🐾🖤 #lebeauchat 5mo
See All 6 Comments
Graywacke @Texreader @dabbe she would thank you but, well, she has that goddess attitude cat thing (edited) 5mo
Graywacke @Suet624 it‘s easy, fun reading. 🙂 5mo
Dilara Ooh, I have seen that Silence is in my anthology of medieval love and chivalry writings but I haven't read it yet! Looking forward to your opinion on it 😁 5mo
52 likes6 comments