Old French Tales from Brittany
Marie de France: The Story of Eliduc
12th century, Old French: British Library, Bibliothèque Nationale Paris.
The weasel places a flower in the dead weasel’s mouth. Almost immediately, the animal revives and sets off with its companion.
Eliduc was a nobleman living in Brittany, at a time that seemed remote even to a Norman-French-speaking lady living in England in the twelfth-century AD, a lady who was anxious to make a permanent, written record of some of the old oral tales of Brittany, before these tales disappeared altogether; a lady known to us as Marie de France.
Eliduc was a married man and a great favourite of his lord, who was the king of Brittany. But like all successful men, he had made enemies, and their slander turned the king against Eliduc, who now saw a necessity to flee the country for a while.
Across the English Channel, possibly before it could have been given that name, Eliduc offered his services to the ruler of one of the kingdoms of Britain that, like the Celtic tribes which Julius Caesar described, were dotted around the land and rarely averse to a bit of tribal conflict. And here he fell in love with the daughter of this particular king. And she herself became so besotted with Eliduc that when he was compelled to leave and return to his own kingdom across the water, she begged him to set a date for his swift return. He did so. And when the time came, he honoured his pledge and came in a boat to fetch her back to his own land.
A storm blew up while they were at sea and in the hysteria, a crewman revealed to the damsel that Eliduc was a married man. She fell to the deck in a swoon; a faint that soon became like death itself and was taken as such by the distraught Eliduc.
Now we must move to a chapel in the forest where this maiden lies before the altar, awaiting burial. Eliduc has been called away from the district for a few hours and his wife, seizing the opportunity to confirm her suspicions, approaches the body with tears in her eyes. The damsel lying there is so beautiful. At this moment, a weasel runs out of the body. The servant throws a stick at it, killing the creature. Another weasel approaches the little corpse, the weasel’s corpse, and then flees quickly into the forest, returning shortly with a red flower which it places in the dead weasel’s mouth. Almost immediately, the animal revives and sets off with its companion. Seizing the moment, the servant throws the stick once again at the weasel causing it to drop the flower. The lady places the flower in the dead damsel’s mouth and almost at once, she opens her eyes and raises herself from her bier.
