Marie De France's Laustic the Nightingale Term Paper

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Marie De France

Courtly Love, Holy Love: Lovers in a hostile world of oppressive marriages and social conventions use love as escape from oppressive material world and a way of accessing the divine in the secular sphere of feudal obligation and sexuality

According to the essay upon the "Rules of Courtly Love," an introduction to one of the Lais of Marie De France, the concept of courtly love often revolves around the image of an idealized image of a pure, untouchable young woman, usually married out of social obligation to an older lord, whom is idolized from afar by a younger, poorer, or less socially desirable man. The relationship between the married woman and the unmarried man is supposed to parallel the distanced yet intimate sensibility that exists between a human being and the divine, or more specifically within the medieval, Christian concept, between a Christian believer and the Virgin Mary. Mary is a uniquely accessible ear for all humankind because she can and will intervene upon behalf of humanity, appealing to God for mercy. Mary is integral to the holy trinity's ability to manifest itself on earth. All believers in Christ must respect her true nature and purity.

The marital status of the real, idealized woman in the courtly love scenario allows her to be sexualized in a way that the Virgin Mary is not -- although the Virgin was married, to Joseph.

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Yet the woman in the courtly love scenario is, also like Mary, able to remain chaste within the context of the story because the young man, usually a knight, whom desires her romantically and carnally, cannot infringe upon the bed of another man. Quite often the young man has a social obligation to the woman's husband, whom might be his lord or commander.

However, in Marie De France's "Laustic" or "The Nightingale" the longing, courtly relationship is not between humans. Rather, the plot revolves around the desire a young woman for a beautiful bird. The young woman's life is rendered spiritually meaningful from the sight of the animal. The young wife pines for the bird, arousing her husband's jealously much like the courtly relationships of love.

However, the woman's more active pursuit of the bird, albeit with her gaze rather than military prowess, paradoxically renders her more active than the typical heroine of the courtly love scenario and more like the young married man, whom often accomplishes feats in the name of his beloved, to prove his love.

Although the wife says to her husband, "anyone who hasn't heard the nightingale….....

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"Marie De France's Laustic The Nightingale", 07 January 2004, Accessed.6 June. 2026,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/marie-de-france-laustic-nightingale-162897