Guilty sisters: Marguerite de Navarre, Elizabeth of England, and the Miroir de l'ame pecheresse.Le miroir For other uses, see Mirror (disambiguation). Le Miroir (real name Claude Bonnel) is a fictional character from the Wild Cards anthology series. He first appeared in the short story "Mirrors of the Soul" by Melinda M. de l'ame pecheresse, a volume of devotional verse named for its principal poem, was published in Alencon in 1531 and in Paris two years later. The Paris edition identifies its author as "Marguerite de France, Soeur Vnicque du Roy," and later as "Royne de Navarre."(1) Some eleven years later, the daughter of Henry VIII translated the Miroir as a gift for her latest stepmother, Queen Katherine Parr. The poem has thus a doubly unusual status. In an age when literature was overwhelmingly male in its origins, the agencies of genesis and transmission for this work were female. And in an age when most writers came from the middle class, the agents of its production and reproduction were of high birth, members of royal families. Marguerite's title of "queen of Navarre" carried with it a fairly limited sovereignty, such power as there was residing with her husband Henri de Navarre, with the kingdom itself being largely under Spanish rule. And though Elizabeth would eventually reign as queen in her own right, no one in 1544 expected such an outcome. Henry VIII still ruled, and his son Edward was being carefully groomed to succeed him. The salient fact about both Marguerite and Elizabeth was that they were royal sisters: Marguerite being the sister of the present king of France Noun 1. King of France - the sovereign ruler of France king, male monarch, Rex - a male sovereign; ruler of a kingdom , Francois I, and Elizabeth of the future king of England Noun 1. King of England - the sovereign ruler of England King of Great Britain king, male monarch, Rex - a male sovereign; ruler of a kingdom , Edward, prince of Wales Edward, Prince of Wales kingling becomes urchin in clothing exchange. [Am. Lit.: The Prince and the Pauper] See : Substitution . The circumstance may be only coincidental, but it provides an interesting vantage point from which to examine both the poem and its translation. As the primary inventor of the Miroir, Marguerite is the main focus for this inquiry. Intelligent and talented, she had been educated along with her brother and in adulthood promoted both the Renaissance and the Reformation in France. Best known for her collection of nouvelles, the Heptameron, she also wrote plays and poems on both secular and spiritual themes, and possibly a treatise in letters defending the worth and superiority of women. The attribution in this last case, though not the others, is far from certain. The treatise may instead have been the work of her great-niece, another Marguerite de Valois
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. . Being more intelligent than men and therefore more capable of ruling justly, women originally held dominion; only later were they ousted by men.(2) This latter notion might have had considerable personal resonance for either of the Marguerites, since both saw their brothers become kings of France but never ruled themselves. In any case, the Marguerite who concerns us here, as the firstborn first·born adj. First in order of birth; born first. n. The child in a family who is born first. Noun 1. firstborn - the offspring who came first in the order of birth eldest child in a branch of the Orleans line, occupied the center of parental-dynastic attention, but only until Francois came along two years later to displace her: displace her not only as the new baby but as the desired boy, the potential heir to the French throne which under Salic law Salic law, rule of succession Salic law (sā`lĭk), rule of succession in certain royal and noble families of Europe, forbidding females and those descended in the female line to succeed to the titles or offices in the family. she could never be. The children's father died soon afterward, and there followed for Marguerite, as for her mother Louise de Savoie, a lifetime of total concentration on Francois, first as heir and eventually as king. Yet somewhere under her unwavering sisterly devotion, Marguerite's original radical displacement must still have rankled. The poem at issue, "The Mirror of the Sinful Soul," is an outpouring (over 1400 lines) of self-accusation and self-abasement, recalling Paul and Augustine in its theological stance.(3) Marguerite sympathized with the evangelical movement in France and by her patronage sheltered many of its members. The Reformist orientation is apparent in the poem's Pauline-Augustinian bent, as in the prominence of biblical allusions.(4) The speaker of the poetic monologue presents herself as a wretched sinner, who has so violated and betrayed her relationship with God that she is totally unworthy of his grace. Parsing See parse. parsing - parser out that relationship into a series of familial paradigms - daughter, mother, sister, wife - she explores each area of defection through an exemplary episode from the Bible. She becomes, in turn, the prodigal PRODIGAL, civil law, persons. Prodigals were persons who, though of full age, were incapable of managing their affairs, and of the obligations which attended them, in consequence of their bad conduct, and for whom a curator was therefore appointed. 2. child who deserted her loving father; the mother with the dead baby who came for Solomon's judgment; the sister of Moses who set herself up against his authority; and the adulterous wife of the prophet Hosea. There are other more incidental scriptural echoes marked in the margin, but the core episodes are chosen with special care. Each one displays not only sin and waywardness but an eventual return to grace. The prodigal is lost, and then found and rejoiced over (Luke 15); the bereaved woman before Solomon is shown to be the true mother of the living child, who is then restored to her (1 Kings 3); Moses's sister Miriam, whom God struck with leprosy leprosy or Hansen's disease (hăn`sənz), chronic, mildly infectious malady capable of producing, when untreated, various deformities and disfigurements. for challenging her brother's supremacy, is cured through the intercession intercession, n a prayer in which a request is made on behalf of another person. of that same brother and received back into the Israelite camp (Numbers 12); even the faithless harlot is reinstated as beloved wife in her husband's home (Hosea 1-3). The penitential pen·i·ten·tial adj. 1. Of, relating to, or expressing penitence. 2. Of or relating to penance. n. 1. A book or set of church rules concerning the sacrament of penance. 2. A penitent. roles Marguerite adopts are, with one exception, familiar in Christian devotional tradition. The position of humble child kneeling before "our Father" was a natural one, and that of the bride longing for her husband was even more widely used because of the allegorical understanding of the biblical Song of Songs as describing the marital union between Christ and the Church. The role of mother, if less intrinsically natural in relation to the Godhead, was authorized by Christ's own human mother, the model for all intimate communion with God. In verbal and visual figure Mary is mother and child at once: "figlia del tuo figlio," in Dante's familiar phrase (Paradiso 33.1).(5) Mother-daughter simultaneity was also nourished by the Eastern Church tradition of the Virgin's "dormition": her falling asleep in death and subsequent rebirth in paradise. Though not officially celebrated in the Western liturgy, the Dormition of Mary was familiar in pictorial representation, which showed the mature mother of the infant God waking up as God's infant daughter.(6) Generations of devout Christians in medieval and early modern times presented themselves to God as bride, child, mother. The subordinate female roles were appropriate to men as well as women, for coram Deo Coram Deo may refer to:
prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Caroline Bynum's survey, for example, Mechtild of Hackeborn addresses Christ as her bridegroom and father; Aldobrandesca of Siena wants a painting of the Blessed Virgin "holding Christ in her arms and drinking from his wound.' For St. Francis of Assisi in his "Letter to the Faithful," the friars are brides and mothers of Jesus. The mystic Henry Suso Henry Suso (Also called Amandus, a name adopted in his writings, and Heinrich Seuse in German) was a German mystic, born at Überlingen on Lake Constance on March 21, c. images himself as a bride, a nursing infant, a mother wanting to suckle suck·le v. suck·led, suck·ling, suck·les v.tr. 1. a. To cause or allow to take milk at the breast or udder; nurse. b. To take milk at the breast or udder of. 2. God.(8) The Ancrene Riwle expounds divine love in terms of spouse and child. Later Teresa of Avila Noun 1. Teresa of Avila - Spanish mystic and religious reformer; author of religious classics and a Christian saint (1515-1582) Saint Teresa of Avila , to aid her Conceptions of the Love of God, will frequently invoke the bride and occasionally the nursing infant.(9) What is unusual in Marguerite's set of familial paradigms is "sister." Devotional writers who easily move into the roles of parent, child, and spouse do not, on the whole, present themselves as God's sisters or brothers.(10) Gary Ferguson Professor Gary Ferguson is a specialist in French Renaissance literature and culture at the University of Delaware in the USA. He graduated in 1985 with a first-class honours degree from St Chad's College, Durham University. , seeking backgrounds for Marguerite's religious poetry, found no analogues in late medieval and early Renaissance French devotional writing, Protestant or Catholic, for the soul in a sisterly relation with God or the extensive treatment of Miriam and Moses.(11) Marguerite herself is more traditional in a later poem, Les Prisons: "Puys se monstrant de Dieu espouse et fille," wife and daughter of God.(12) But in the Miroir she is sister as well. The Bible does offer some basis for the sibling relationship. The synoptic Gospels Synoptic Gospels (sĭnŏp`tĭk) [Gr. synopsis=view together], the first three Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke), considered as a unit. report that Jesus, when told that his mother and brothers were outside claiming his attention, answered that those who did God's will Noun 1. God's Will - the omnipotence of a divine being omnipotence - the state of being omnipotent; having unlimited power were his mother and brother and sister (Matthew 12:50, Mark 3:35, Luke 8:21). And the Song of Songs, locus classicus locus clas·si·cus n. pl. loci clas·si·ci A passage from a classic or standard work that is cited as an illustration or instance. for the topos to·pos n. pl. to·poi A traditional theme or motif; a literary convention. [Greek, short for (koinos) topos, (common)place.] Noun 1. of the soul as bride, several times combines it with the fraternal bond: "my sister, my spouse" (4:9, 10, 12; 5:1, 2). In this configuration, however, "sister" is folded into "spouse," intensifying the implied closeness of lover to beloved.(13) It is not developed as a separate relationship. But Marguerite does develop it separately.(14) This is perhaps not surprising, since for her "sister" was always the central relationship, the tie that took precedence over all others. The opening of the Miroir, as I have said, identifies her for the reader first as the king's sister, and only afterwards as queen of Navarre. That order of titles reflects the priorities of her whole life. Her adored brother came first, before either husband: the dull Charles d'Alencon or the wayward Henri de Navarre. For Francois too the sibling bond was primary. He called his sister "ma mignonne," bestowed honors and lands on her, advanced her inept first husband far beyond poor Alencon's deserts or capacities. When Francois was captive and ill in Spain after being defeated at the battle of Pavia “Battle of Pavia” redirects here. For other battles at Pavia, see Battle of Pavia (disambiguation). The Battle of Pavia, fought on the morning of February 24, 1525, was the decisive engagement of the Italian War of 1521. , it was Marguerite who came to nurse him and negotiate for his release while their mother Louise ran the kingdom back home. Francois liked to have his sister present at court, where she and Louise - and not either of the king's wives - constituted the chief female influence. The family trio, Francois, Louise, and Marguerite, celebrated their closeness with the designation "our Trinity." If the theological equation seems rather daring, it is even more surprising to find Bishop Briconnet, Marguerite's fervently evangelical spiritual advisor, taking up the metaphor with full approval. His letters freely refer to the royal "trinite": three persons united in love, three bodies with a single heart. Even discounting for courtly flattery and evangelical zeal (Briconnet was trying through Marguerite to influence the king and the Queen Mother in favor of the Reform movement), the bishop's repeated endorsement of their earthly devotion in heavenly terms is striking. The family trinity, he asserts, is by no means at odds with the divine one, but bound up in it through love. Indeed, the divine trinity has found its earthly home in the hearts of Francois, Louise, and Marguerite.(15) "I know," wrote Briconnet, "that you love, after God, the King and Madame" (1.61). Given the divinity that hedged sixteenth-century kings and her brother's preeminence and power in Marguerite's personal life, it would be surprising if the line between God and the king did not begin to blur. The bishop himself helps the process along, for example by comparing the king's visits to his children with God's manifestation of himself to his creatures (2.25). After Francois's death, the grieving sister would comfort herself with the thought of her brother and God as co-rulers in heaven, a vision that almost merges her two true kings into a single image of royal potency.(16) As for the "trinity," its earthly version had a kind of structural similarity to the traditional configuration of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost Holy Ghost: see Holy Spirit. , in that the second and third persons of the Angouleme triad took their significance from the first. But of course the "first" person in this case was not the mother Louise or the older sibling Marguerite but Francois, as prospective and then actual king. The status and power of Louise and Marguerite, even their meaning, derived from him. Indeed, one could argue that Marguerite's connection with Francois was structured by the same set of relations through which she addresses God in the Miroir. Two years older than the doted-on male heir, she had from their childhood a motherly moth·er·ly adj. 1. Of, like, or appropriate to a mother: motherly love. 2. Showing the affection of a mother. adv. In a manner befitting a mother. as well as a sisterly function for him. As his subject when Francois was king, she functioned as child to a father. She could not, of course, be his spouse. But one need not fall in with Michelet's suspicions of something incestuous in·ces·tu·ous adj. 1. Of, involving, or suggestive of incest. 2. Having committed incest. between Francois and Marguerite to recognize that her brother was the central man in her life? It is hard to overstate the importance of that single enduring attachment for "a woman who had scarcely known her father, who experienced two disappointing marriages, whose longing for a son was repeatedly frustrated."(18) My purpose, however, is not to convict Marguerite of incestuous desires or even of confusing Francois with God. I want to move in quite another direction, opened by the probability that for all her adoration Marguerite could not help being aware from their early years that her abilities were as good as or better than her brother's. Intellectually and even diplomatically, she outshone him. Did she on some level resent the tyranny of custom that conferred all the power on this younger brother Wiki is aware of the following uses of "'Younger Brother":
Si vous lisez ceste oeuure toute entiere, Arrestez vous, sans plus, a la matiere: En excusant le Rhyme, et le langaige, Voyant que c'est d'une femme femme adj. Slang Exhibiting stereotypical or exaggerated feminine traits. Used especially of lesbians and gay men. n. 1. Slang One who is femme. 2. Informal A woman or girl. l'ouuraige: Qui n'a en soy science/ ne scauoir, Fors vng desir, que chascun puisse veoir, Que faict le don de DIEV le Createur, Quand il luy plaist iustifier vng cueur: Quel est le cueur d'ung homme/ quant a soy Auant que'il ait receu le don de Foy: Par lequel seul l'homme a la congoissance De la Bonte/ Sapience/et Puissance puis·sance n. Power; might. [Middle English, from Old French, from poissant, powerful, present participle of pooir, to be able; see power. . Et aussi tost/ qu'il congoist Verite vé·ri·té n. Cinéma vérité. , Son cueur est plein d'amour/ et Charite. Ainsi bruslant/ perd toute vaine crainte (lines 1-15). Marguerite begs the reader to pay attention only to the content of her poem, making allowances for her defective style because she is only a woman. As such, she has no skill or learning, only a desire to show what God's gift can achieve when it pleases him to justify a human heart, to make it worthy by faith. What, she questions dismissively, is man's heart by itself before he has received this gift of faith? But once that infusion is his, he understands all goodness and wisdom, loses all fear. In short, the poet is only a woman - but a woman is capable of receiving the divine gift, without which no man can do anything of worth either. "Femme" thus slides into "homme," and Marguerite's gendered humility transmutes into a veiled assertion of equality with men, an assertion firmly grounded in the Lutheran sola fides. An oblique challenge rears up here, not necessarily consciously, to male dominance Male dominance, or maledom, generally refers to heterosexual BDSM activities where the dominant partner is male, and the submissive partner is female. However, the term is sometimes used to refer to homosexual BDSM activities, where both partners are male and one is dominant. in general and especially to the supremacy of her brother. The challenge surfaces again even as Marguerite examines her guilt as a sister through the biblical figure of Miriam (lines 497-580). Like Marguerite herself, Miriam was focused from her early days on the well-being of her younger but more important brother Moses. The Exodus account (2:1-9) relates that she watched to see who picked up the baby left in the basket of bulrushes, and then volunteered their mother to Pharaoh's daughter Pharaoh's Daughter is a world music band from New York City. Their music is a mix of American folk, Jewish klezmer, and Middle Eastern sounds. The bandleader is Basya Schechter (lead vocals, oud, guitar, saz). as a nurse for the foundling. When Moses led Israel out of Egypt, his sister, called "the prophetess," celebrated the triumph at the Red Sea in ecstatic verse (Exodus 15:20-21). But sometime during the years in the wilderness Miriam, with the other brother Aaron, rebelled against Moses's supremacy. They resented their brother's marriage to a foreign woman,(19) but almost immediately in the Biblical narrative another grievance displaces this one: "Has the Lord indeed spoken only through Moses? Has he not spoken through us also?"(20) When Marguerite appropriates this persona for her trespasses against God, it is hard not to hear in the resulting voice some bitterness against Francois as well. Like Moses, he has been marked out from the beginning for special favor and rule, while her own gifts, like Miriam's, count for little. From this perspective, it is interesting to find Marguerite here accusing herself not only of pride but of treason, in that she has wished to subject God's works to rational scrutiny. This divinely instituted way of things that must not be questioned gathers in the cultural subjection of women, who may not reign in their own right and whose gifts exist only for the service of others. In the biblical story, God reaffirms his unique relation with Moses and angrily reproves Miriam and Aaron for challenging their brother's authority as leader. It was Miriam alone, however, who was punished with leprosy. This distinction between her and her male co-conspirator may seem all too predictable to modern feminists (presumption would of course be more offensive in a woman than in a man), but it caused earlier commentators some trouble. Usually they point in explanation to the Hebrew form of the opening of Numbers 12:1, which attaches the verb for spoke to her name, adding Aaron's afterwards: this suggests the prime mover prime mover: see energy, sources of. Prime mover The component of a power plant that transforms energy from the thermal or the pressure form to the mechanical form. was Miriam, who then stirred up Aaron.(21) Marguerite achieves a comparable emphasis by figuring Aaron not as a separate offender but as an aspect of herself and her native intelligence. In any case, Miriam is stricken with leprosy for her presumption and cast out of the Israelite camp as unclean. The cure must come from the same source as the disease, God; and only Moses, the brother against whom she offended, has the power to bring it about. The knot of rebellion, resistance, and dependence that entangles Miriam twice over, in this story chosen by Marguerite, implicates as well her own situation with her all-powerful brother.(22) For her, too, the one whose potent presence makes her inferior and worthless is also the one who confers status on her, the one through whom she reclaims worth. In appropriating Miriam's story, though, Marguerite devised a happy ending that goes well beyond Miriam's original restoration to health and community with Israel as recounted in Exodus. The penitent sister of the Miroir is not only forgiven for rebelling against her God-brother, but she becomes one with him: "Or puis que frere et soeur ensemble sommes, / Il me chault peu de tousles aultres hommes" (lines 565-66); "Now that brother and sister are at one, other men matter little to me." Since the brother in Marguerite's fiction is God, the accent is on "other men." But one cannot neatly excise from this complex the earthly brother, with the accent on "other men" - especially in view of what immediately follows: "Vostre terre, c'est mon vray heritaige. / Ne faisons plus, s'il vous plaist, qu'vng mesnaige" (567-68). The marginal citation is Psalm 27 (Vulgate Vulgate (vŭl`gāt) [Lat. Vulgata editio=common edition], most ancient extant version of the whole Christian Bible. Its name derives from a 13th-century reference to it as the "editio vulgata. 26), with its request to "dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life" (verse 4). But Marguerite prefaces this wish that they might live together with the assertion that her brother's lands are her true inheritance. The solution she arrives at thus encompasses not only her estrangement from God through sin but also her exclusion from the royal inheritance, the lands of France. A few lines before, she was repeating "Vostre ie suis . . . Vostre ie suis, et vostre doublement" (560-61), and now "Vostre terre, c'est mon vray heritaige': I am yours, doubly yours, which means that what is yours is truly mine. As in the opening of the whole poem, she turns humility into disguised self-assertion. I am speculating, then, that this penitential exercise opened an opportunity for a kind of "working through' of the resentments entangled en·tan·gle tr.v. en·tan·gled, en·tan·gling, en·tan·gles 1. To twist together or entwine into a confusing mass; snarl. 2. To complicate; confuse. 3. To involve in or as if in a tangle. with Marguerite's real and deep-rooted devotion to her king-brother. Probably both resentment and working-through were operating below the level of full consciousness, but their effects can nevertheless be felt in her devotional stance and language as well as her choice of scriptural material. The rebellion, punishment, and forgiveness of Miriam provided a useful vehicle, a cover or perhaps even a stimulus? - for articulating hostile feelings that her habitual devotion usually kept well suppressed. The working-through process achieves resolution in renewed identification with the god of her family trinity, identification so complete that all his powers and possessions become hers as well. The first translator of the French king's sister was the English king's daughter, Elizabeth, and the work she translated was the Miroir de l'ame pecheresse. "The Glasse of the Synnefull Soule," in its elaborately worked binding, was presented to her stepmother Queen Katherine Parr as a New Year's gift for 1545. Biographers of Elizabeth I Elizabeth I, queen of England Elizabeth I, 1533–1603, queen of England (1558–1603). Early Life The daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, she was declared illegitimate just before the execution of her mother in 1536, but in pass quickly over this effort with remarks about her early aptness at languages, penmanship, and needlework needlework, work done with a needle, either plain sewing, mending, or ornamental work such as embroidery, quilting, smocking, hemstitching, fagoting, some kinds of lace making (see lace), patchwork, and appliqué. . They find it difficult to connect the poem's self-conviction of sin with its eleven-year-old translator, except as an example of the precocious gravity of Tudor children.(23) We don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. who chose Marguerite's penitential meditation for this occasion or why. Percy Ames and Marc Shell Marc Shell, born 1947 in Montreal, is a Canadian literary critic, currently Irving Babbit Professor of Comparative Literature and Professor of English at Harvard University. See also Marc Shell. think it likely that Marguerite had sent a copy of the 1533 Paris edition to Queen Anne Queen Anne n. The style in English architecture and furniture typical of the reign of Queen Anne (1702-1714). Queen Anne Adjective 1. Boleyn, with whom she had been acquainted in France, and that Elizabeth found it in her dead mother's collection and chose to render its principal poem in English.(24) Katherine Parr herself, always concerned for the education of her stepchildren, may have suggested the Miroir to the young Elizabeth. Marguerite was familiar to Katherine as a force in diplomacy and one who shared her own commitment to humanism and religious reform. Larger diplomatic reasons may have influenced Katherine's recommendation as well; as Anne Lake Prescott has shown, the English court in this period took Marguerite's abilities and influential power very seriously.(25) Or Elizabeth, who had a mind of her own, may have initiated the work knowing that her choice would please the new queen. In any case, whether she found Marguerite's family-structured meditation on her own or was led to it by someone else, the English princess had a good deal in common with the older French one. Her situation as elder sister of the favored royal male was like Marguerite's, only worse: she was not even "soeur unique" but one of two half-sisters, and she was officially illegitimate at that. Elizabeth occasionally shared lessons with Edward, as Marguerite had with Francois, and like Marguerite she was more gifted than her brother: even allowing for his four years' disadvantage in age, Edward, though precocious, lacked her brilliance.(26) Nevertheless, because he was a boy Edward counted for everything. He would be king. He would never be declared illegitimate. Even had Edward's mother survived and caused trouble, Henry VIII would on no account have bastardized bas·tard·ize tr.v. bas·tard·ized, bas·tard·iz·ing, bas·tard·iz·es 1. To lower in quality or character; debase. 2. To declare or prove (someone) to be a bastard. his male offspring. Gender is everything, even legitimacy. "The Lady Elizabeth" (as a bastard, she had no right to the title of princess) probably was not aware of these parallels between translator and author. She does not name Marguerite in her presentation and perhaps knew little of her. But as Elizabeth worked through the poem, Marguerite's persona as errant sister and the paradigm of Miriam might well have found a responsive echo in her. Her own situation invited similar resentment: subordinate, apparently forever, to a brother who was her inferior in age and natural powers. As in Marguerite's case, any such resentment was probably less than conscious, kept in abeyance A lapse in succession during which there is no person in whom title is vested. In the law of estates, the condition of a freehold when there is no person in whom it is vested. In such cases the freehold has been said to be in nubibus (in the clouds), in pendenti by a self-discipline early acquired, as well as a genuine fondness for her little brother. History records little about the relationship between Edward and Elizabeth at this stage in their lives, but the little that does exist suggests real emotional attachment: we hear for example how the young princess annually gave her brother a cambric shirt of her own making as a birthday gift, and how the two younger royal children clung together as they wept for the death of their father.(27) But however fond Elizabeth was of Edward, her translation in its first printed form suggests the same complexity we have seen in Marguerite's work, with female self-denigration sliding into female self-assertion. In 1548, the Protestant polemicist po·lem·i·cist also po·lem·ist n. A person skilled or involved in polemics. polemicist, polemist a skilled debater in speech or writing. — polemical, adj. John Bale
John Bale (21 November, 1495–November, 1563) was an English churchman, historian and controversialist, and Bishop of Ossory. He was born at Cove, near Dunwich in Suffolk. published Elizabeth's translation, with surrounding materials praising her correct religious sentiments and precocious learning. Four passages from Ecclesiasticus added to the text may have been Bale's idea, since they have to do with women's virtues and vices, but he attributes the addition to Elizabeth herself: There is not a more wycked heade, than the heade of the serpente, And there is no wrathe aboue the wrathe of a woman. But he that hath goten a vertuouse woman, hath goten a goodly good·ly adj. good·li·er, good·li·est 1. Of pleasing appearance; comely. 2. Quite large; considerable: a goodly sum. possessyon. She is vnto hym an helpe and pyller, wherevpon he restith. It were better to dwelle with a lyon and dragon. than to kepe howse with a wycked wyfe. Yet depart not from a dyscrete, and good woman, that is fallen vnto the[e] for thy porcyon in the feare of the lorde. For the gifte of her honestie, is aboue golde.(28) The choice of verses, if it was Elizabeth's, balances denunciations of female depravity with assertions of female worth. Taken together, from a woman's point of view, the passages mingle humility, in their self-monitory warnings against female wickedness, with a sense of woman's power, in her virtue - or in her wrath. When Elizabeth tells Queen Katherine in her dedicatory letter that the part she wrought in the work was "as well spirituall, as manuall," perhaps this is what she meant.(29) Marguerite's career forecasts what would have happened to Elizabeth if Edward had lived. Like her French prototype, Elizabeth would presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. have remained close to her brother, who nevertheless would sooner or later have ordered her into some politically or dynastically advantageous marriage - advantageous for him, that is. She would surely have been a strong intellectual and literary force at the English court, if allowed to remain there. Yet she would always be at best a moon to Edward's sun, reflecting power rather than having it vested in her. But Edward VI Edward VI, 1537–53, king of England (1547–53), son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour. Edward succeeded his father to the throne at the age of nine. Henry had made arrangements for a council of regents, but the council immediately appointed Edward's uncle, did not live, and England had no Salic Law. Five years after his death at sixteen, Elizabeth became queen of England Noun 1. Queen of England - the sovereign ruler of England female monarch, queen regnant, queen - a female sovereign ruler . In doing so, she rewrote the story of Marguerite de Navarre This article is about 16th-century author and queen of Navarre. For the 12th-century Sicilian queen, see Margaret of Navarre (Sicilian queen). Marguerite de Navarre (April 11, 1492 – December 21, 1549), also known as Marguerite of Angouleme and . What is more, she rewrote the story of Miriam as well. As sole ruler of her people and head of the English church, she made Miriam displace Moses and Aaron both. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Swarthmore College, at Swarthmore, Pa.; coeducational; founded 1864 by the Society of Friends. It maintains a cooperative program with Bryn Mawr College, Haverford College, and the Univ. of Pennsylvania. 1 In quotations of the poem I have regularized the barred e used in the Salminen edition to indicate metrical met·ri·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or composed in poetic meter: metrical verse; five metrical units in a line. 2. Of or relating to measurement. elision e·li·sion n. 1. a. Omission of a final or initial sound in pronunciation. b. Omission of an unstressed vowel or syllable, as in scanning a verse. 2. The act or an instance of omitting something. . 2 Ascriptions of the lost work to the elder Marguerite (e.g. Richardson, 112; Kelso, 383; King, 206) seem to derive ultimately from the undocumented paraphrase of L'Escale in Abensour, 7-8, which indeed cites Marguerite de Navarre but identifies her with la reine Margot. 3 The poem's overall structure and movement are summarized by Prescott, 63-64. 4 Two years after Le Miroir was first published in 1531, with two other devotional poems by Marguerite and (in one edition) Clement Marot's translation of Psalm 6, the volume was condemned by the Sorbonne. Along with its general Reformist cast and Pauline emphasis on the primacy of faith, the Miroir may have drawn specific objection by its unsanctioned translations of the Bible, glosses drawn from Lefevre d'Etaples' French Bible as well as Marot's psalm. Under pressure from the King, the Sorbonne clerics withdrew their condemnation. 5 Warner, part 3, esp. 128-33, 169-70. 6 See Shell, fig. 5 and 295, n. 21. 7 Bynum, 1991, notes how the male-female asymmetry is mapped onto the contrast between God (Father, Bridegroom) and anima anima /an·i·ma/ (an´i-mah) [L.] 1. the soul. 2. in jungian terminology, the unconscious, or inner being, of the individual, as opposed to the personality presented to the world (persona); by extension, used to (child, bride) (151). This mapping is discussed at more length in Bynum, 1987, 282-92. 8 Bynum, 1991, 161-62; 1987, 93-94; 1991, 165-66; 1987, 103. She finds the characteristic stances of the male mystic to be the bride, the nursing mother, and the suckling suckling In mammals, the drawing of milk into the mouth from the nipple of a mammary gland. In human beings, it is referred to as nursing or breast-feeding. The word also denotes an animal that has not yet been weaned—that is, whose access to milk has not yet been baby (1987, 288), and the characteristic stances of female religious writers to be the mother and the bride (291). 9 Salu, 170-81. Teresa, 2.357-99. 10 Bonaventura's Itinerarium speaks in one place of the soul in contemplation becoming daughter, spouse, friend, sister, and heir to God (69); but what he expands in this chapter is the spouse-relation. Mechtild of Magdeburg does bring together Christ as father, brother, and bridegroom in the manner of Marguerite (Bynum, 1982, 243); Bynum's account of Gertrude of Helfta's writing also includes two allusions to Christ as brother, though here again the images of parent or bridegroom or child to be mothered are far more frequent (187-91). Teresa in Exclamations of the Soul to God (2.407), addresses God as "true Lord and Brother"; but while she expatiates separately at some length on the first term (Lord-Bridegroom, 417-18), the second is not developed. 11 Ferguson, 199. Ferguson has to go all the way back to Origen for any similar commentary on the Exodus story, and even here the emphasis is on spiritual leprosy rather than the sibling relation (226, n. 30). 12 Les Prisons, line 4325. 13 Francis Landy observes that in wishing that her lover were "as my brother, that sucked the breasts of my mother" (Song of Songs 8:1-2) the bride longs to conflate con·flate tr.v. con·flat·ed, con·flat·ing, con·flates 1. To bring together; meld or fuse: "The problems [with the biopic] include . . the stranger who attracts her so powerfully with the known, familiar companion of her childhood. It is this apparently impossible fusion of the Other with the Same that the bridegroom asserts with his repeated "my sister, my spouse," thus perfectly fulfilling the contradictory desires of love (Alter and Kermode, 311-12). 14 Besides expounding ex·pound v. ex·pound·ed, ex·pound·ing, ex·pounds v.tr. 1. To give a detailed statement of; set forth: expounded the intricacies of the new tax law. 2. the sister relation through the separate biblical episode of Miriam's rebellion against Moses (see below), Marguerite uses the Song of Songs to make the transition between soeur and epouse. She quotes "You have ravished RAVISHED, pleadings. In indictments for rape, this technical word must be introduced, for no other word, nor any circumlocution, will answer the purpose. The defendant should be charged with having "feloniously ravished" the prosecutrix, or woman mentioned in the indictment. Bac. Ab. my heart, my sister, my bride" (4:9) and goes on a few lines later to the spouse-role asserted in the same lines: "Ma soeur tu as naure mon cueur. . . Pareillement Espouse me clamez, / En ce lieu la" (lines 329-35). 15 Briconnet, Correspondance, 1.61; 1.175-76; 2.40; 2.136. Cf. 2.135, which applies to the union of the king and his mother and sister the trefoil trefoil (trē`foil) [O.Fr.,=three-leaf], in botany, name for several plants, chiefly of the pulse family, having trifoliate leaves. Best known of the trefoils is clover. image (three in one, admitting no division) traditionally used for the Trinity of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Briconnet's concentration on the royal trio leaves out as unimportant the relation between Marguerite and her husband Alencon. After one praise of the royal trinity, he urges her to be "vraye marguerite par union indivisible INDIVISIBLE. That which cannot be separated. 2. It is important to ascertain when a consideration or a contract, is or is not indivisible. When a consideration is entire and indivisible, and it is against law, the contract is void in toto. 11 Verm. 592; 2 W. avec vostre doulx et debonnaire espoux, Jesus" (1.175-76). Her earthly spouse is not mentioned. 16 "L'a prins a soy, ou eternellement / Avec luy regne, et ca bas a regne, / Car il estoit pour estre vray roy ne" (Les Prisons, lines 4576-78). In Le Navire, she looks forward to Judgment Day, "Ou de mes yeulx j'espere veoir mon frere: / Quant tu viendras, je ne pleureray plus, / Mais je riray, le voiant en gloire mis" (Dernieres poesies, 399). 17 Michelet, 122-32. 18 The phrasing is from Roelker, 37. 19 Those seeking evidence for incestuous relations between Marguerite and Francois might pause over this element in the story Marguerite chose: the leader's sister, who shares his blood, protests his union to a woman from outside the tribe. (Francois' first wife was Breton, his second Spanish.) Ambrose read the situation allegorically, as Synagoga (the Jews) objecting to God's favoring of Ecclesia Ecclesia (Greek, ekklesia: “gathering of those summoned”) In ancient Greece, the assembly of citizens in a city-state. The Athenian Ecclesia already existed in the 7th century; under Solon it consisted of all male citizens age 18 and older. (the Gentiles): cited in Cornelius a Lapide Cornelius Cornelii a Lapide (Cornelis Cornelissen van den Steen) (b. at Bocholt, in Flemish Limburg, 18 December1567; d. at Rome, 12 March1637) was a Flemish Jesuit and exegete. , Yyy5v. 20 Numbers 12:2, Revised Standard Version Re·vised Standard Version n. A modern American version of the English Bible, a revision of the American Standard Version, completed in 1952 and further revised in 1989. Noun 1. . In the Vulgate, as translated by Lefevre d'Etaples, "Dieu nail parle que par Moyses seul? Nail pas aussy semblablement parle a nous?" 21 See for example Cornelius a Lapide, Commentaria, Yyy5r-5v; Ainsworth, O3r; and Attersoll, Ddd5r. Attersoll speculates that Miriam by her importunity IMPORTUNITY. Urgent solicitation, with troublesome frequency and pertinacity. 2. Wills and devises are sometimes set aside in consequence of the importunity of those who have procured them. constrained Aaron "as it were against his will to ioyne with her." Calvin, who blames Miriam as the originator, nevertheless finds Aaron more guilty; he was exempted from the leprosy perhaps because of his sanctification sanc·ti·fy tr.v. sanc·ti·fied, sanc·ti·fy·ing, sanc·ti·fies 1. To set apart for sacred use; consecrate. 2. To make holy; purify. 3. as high priest, so as not to bring the priesthood into disgrace (4.49). 22 Sommers notes that the "equilibrium between sin and reconciliation" that characterizes the preceding episodes of daughter and mother disappears in the more profound rebellion of the sister episode (56-57). 23 Neale, 23-24. 24 Ames, 31; Shell, 3, 19. Prescott, however, thinks that Elizabeth was working from the 1539 Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva. edition, not the 1533 (66). 25 Prescott, 65-66. 26 Chapman, 53, 67. 27 Ibid., 47, 80-81. 28 Elizabeth, E6v. The exact references are Ecclus 25:15 (Vulg. 22); 36:24 (Vulg.26), mislabeled mis·la·bel tr.v. mis·la·beled also mis·la·belled, mis·la·bel·ing also mis·la·bel·ling, mis·la·bels also mis·la·bels To label inaccurately. Adj. 1. 25 in Bale's edition; 25:26 (Vulg. 23); 7:19 (Vulg. 21). Bale says the passages were added by "my lady Helisabeth vnto the begynnynge and ende of her boke v. t. & i. 1. To poke; to thrust. " before he acquired it for publication (E6v). 29 Cited from Salminen ed. of Miroir, 287; Bale's edition does not include the dedicatory letter. Prescott, 68-70, discusses changes and omissions in Elizabeth's translation that may reveal unease with her father and anger at his treatment of her mother. Two other omissions that involve the sibling relationship - she omits "frere" from God's roles at line 952, and she drops line 1189 with its reference to Peace as "soeur" of Justice (Prescott, 70-71) - may point to some perturbation perturbation (pŭr'tərbā`shən), in astronomy and physics, small force or other influence that modifies the otherwise simple motion of some object. The term is also used for the effect produced by the perturbation, e.g. on the brother-front as well. Bibliography Abensour, Leon. La Femme La Femme is a women-only beach in Marina, Egypt which caters to Muslims who want to swim in comfort away from prying and prurient view of "men and cameras". External links
[1] et le feminisme avant la Revolution. Paris, 1923. Ainsworth, Henry. Annotations upon the Fourth Book of Moses The Book of Moses is a text published by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and thought by those within Mormonism to be the translated writings of Moses. It is published today as part of the Pearl of Great Price. , called Numbers. London, 1619. Alter, Robert, and Frank Kermode Sir John Frank Kermode (born 29 November, 1919), is a British literary critic. Frank Kermode was born on the Isle of Man, and was educated at Douglas High School and Liverpool University. , ed. The Literary Guide to the Bible. Cambridge, MA, 1987. Ames, Percy W, ed. The Mirror of the Sinful Soul, facs. of 1544 ms. London, 1897. Attersoll, William. A Commentarie upon the Fourth Booke of Moses, called Numbers. London, 1618. La Saincte bible en francoys. Trans. Jacques Lefevre d'Etaples. Anvers, 1534. Bonaventura. Itinerarium mentis in deum. Trans. Lawrence S. Cunningham. Chicago, 1979. Briconnet, Guillaume and Marguerite d'Angouleme (de Navarre). Correspondance (1521-1524). Ed. C. Martineau, M. Veissiere, and H. Heller. Geneva, 1975-79. Bynum, Caroline Walker. Jesus as Mother: Studies in the Spirituality of the High Middle Ages. Berkeley, 1982. -----. Holy Feast and Holy Fast: The Religious Significance of Food to Medieval Women. Berkeley, 1987. -----. "'. . . And Woman His Humanity': Female Imagery in the Religious Writing of the Later Middle Ages." In Fragmentation and Redemption: Essays on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion, 151-79. New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , 1991. Calvin, Jean. Commentaries on the Four Last Books of Moses. Trans. C. W. Bingham. 4 vols. Grand Rapids Grand Rapids, city (1990 pop. 189,126), seat of Kent co., SW central Mich., on the Grand River; inc. 1850. The second largest city in the state, it is a distribution, wholesale, and industrial center for an area that yields fruit, dairy products, farm produce, , MI, 1950. Chapman, Hester W. The Last Tudor King: A Study of Edward VI. London, 1958. Cornelius a Lapide. Commentaria in Pentateuchum Mosis. Antwerp, 1659. Elizabeth I. A Godly god·ly adj. god·li·er, god·li·est 1. Having great reverence for God; pious. 2. Divine. god Medytacyon of the Christen chris·ten tr.v. chris·tened, chris·ten·ing, chris·tens 1. a. To baptize into a Christian church. b. To give a name to at baptism. 2. a. Sowle . . . aptely translated into Englysh by the ryght vertuouse lady Elizabeth. Ed. John Bale. 1548. Ferguson, Gary. Mirroring Belief.' Marguerite de Navarre's Devotional Poetry. Edinburgh, 1992. Kelso, Ruth. Doctrine for the Lady of the Renaissance. Urbana, 1956. King, Margaret L. Women of the Renaissance. Chicago, 1991. Marguerite de Navarre. Dernieres poesies. Ed. Abel Lefranc. Paris, 1896. -----. Le miroir de l'ame pecheresse. Ed. Renja Salminen. Helsinki, 1979. -----. Les Prisons. Ed. and trans. Claire Lynch Wade. New York, 1989. Michelet, Jules. Histoire de France, vol. 8. Paris, 1876. Neale, John. Queen Elizabeth. New York, 1934. Prescott, Anne Lake. "The Pearl of the Valois and Elizabeth I: Marguerite de Navarre's Miroir and Tudor England." In Silent But for the Word, ed. Margaret P. Hannay, 61-76. Kent, OH, 1985. Richardson, Lula McDowell. The Forerunners of Feminism in French Literature of the Renaissance from Christine of Pisa to Marie de Gournay Marie de Gournay (1565 - 1645) was an admirer of Michel de Montaigne, who having read his works during her teens, went to meet him and eventually became his "adopted daughter". . Baltimore, 1929. Roelker, Nancy Lyman. Queen of Navarre: Jeanne d'Albret 1528-1572. Cambridge, MA, 1968. Salu, M.B., trans. The Ancrene Riwle. Notre Dame, IN, 1956. Shell, Marc. Elizabeth's Glass. Lincoln, NE, 1993. Sommers, Paula. Celestial Ladders: Readings in Marguerite de Navarre's Poetry of Spiritual Ascent. Geneva, 1989. Teresa of Avila. The Complete Works of Saint Teresa of Jesus. Trans. and ed. E. Allison Peers. 3 vols. London, 1946. Warner, Marina. Alone of All her Sex: The Myth and Cult of the Virgin Mary. New York, 1976. |
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