This volume contains the first critical edition of the latest of the three medieval French adaptations of the Song of Songs.
There are three medieval French
adaptations of the Song of Songs, each reflecting a distinct
exegetical tradition. The latest of these three, here edited for
the first time (from BNF fr. 14966), adopts the tropological
interpretation according to which the Song depicts the relationship
of the individual soul with God. The mystical, contemplative
approach owes much to Bernard of Clairvaux, William of St Thierry,
and Thomas the Cistercian, and this Cistercian tradition also has
close links with the Beguines, a connection which receives detailed
exploration in the editor's extensive Introduction. Writing in the
late-thirteenth century in north-eastern France, the author of the
Cantiques is aware of such an association and not only
engages in the familiar procedures of allegorization, but, more
originally, inserts into his commentary eight lyrics which are
modelled on known secular chansons which receive full attention
from the editor. Within the text, which covers Song 1. 1 to Song 3.
11 in 2544 octosyllables arranged in eight-line stanzas, speeches
are assigned to Sponsus, Sponsa, Magister, and
Religio. The Cantiques Salemon is the work of a poet
rather than of a theologian, reflecting many elements associated
with 'la courtoisie mystique', which in turn is characteristic of
writing for the Beguines. The editor provides a detailed summary of
the text, full glossary and notes as well as an account of the
language. To these is added a study of the poet's principal
literary techniques, involving both the varied processes of
translation and the elaboration of a network of links between
stanzas together with the imprint of a personal, lyric quality on
the whole.