Bertran de Born (Occitan: [beɾˈtɾan de ˈbɔɾn]; 1140s - by 1215) was a baron from the Limousin in France, and one of the major Occitan troubadours of the twelfth century.
Biography
·
Early life
Bertran de Born was the eldest son
of Bertran de Born, lord of Hautefort (Occitan: Autafòrt), and his wife Ermengardis.
He had two younger brothers, Constantine and Itier. His father died in 1178,
and Bertran succeeded him as lord of Hautefort. By this time, he was already
married to his first wife, Raimonda, and had two sons.
Hautefort lies at the border between
the Limousin and Périgord. As a result, Bertran became involved in the
conflicts of the sons of Henry
II Plantagenet. He
was also fighting for control of Hautefort.
According to the feudal custom of his region, he was not the only lord
of Hautefort, but held it jointly with his brothers. Other cases of
co-seigneuries were known among the troubadours, the most famous being that of
the "four troubadours of Ussel", three brothers and a cousin, and that
of Raimon
de Miraval and his
brothers. Bertran's struggle, especially with his brother Constantine, is at
the heart of his poetry, which is dominated by political topics.
·
Career
His first datable work is a sirventes (political or satirical song) of
1181, but it is clear from this he already had a reputation as a poet. In 1182,
he was present at his overlord Henry
II of England's
court at Argentan. That same year, he had joined in Henry
the Young King's
revolt against his younger brother, Richard, Count of Poitou and Duke of Aquitaine. He wrote songs encouraging Aimar
V of Limoges and
others to rebel, and took the oath against Richard at Limoges. His brother Constantine took the opposing
side, and Bertran drove him out of the castle in July.
Henry the Young King, whom Bertran
had praised and criticised in his poems, died on campaign in June
Bertran was reconciled also with
Richard, whom he supported in turn against Philip
II of France. At
various times, he sought to exploit the dissensions among the Angevins in order to keep his independence.
He gave them senhals (nicknames): Henry the Young King was Mariniers
(Sailor), Geoffrey of Brittany was Rassa, and Richard, Oc-e-Non (Yes-and-No). He
commemorated Geoffrey's death in the planh, A totz dic que ja mais
non voil. He had contact with a number of other troubadours and also with
the Northern French trouvère, Conon
de Béthune, whom he
addressed as Mon Ysombart.
Although he composed a few cansos
(love songs), Bertran de Born was predominantly a master of the sirventes.
Be.m platz lo gais temps de pascor, which revels in warfare, was
translated by Ezra Pound:
...We shall see battle axes and swords, a-battering colored haumes and
a-hacking through shields at entering melee; and many vassals smiting together,
whence there run free the horses of the dead and wrecked. And when each man of
prowess shall be come into the fray he thinks no more of (merely) breaking
heads and arms, for a dead man is worth more than one taken alive.
I tell you that I find no such savor in eating butter and sleeping, as
when I hear cried "On them!" and from both sides hear horses neighing
through their head-guards, and hear shouted "To aid! To aid!" and see
the dead with lance truncheons, the pennants still on them, piercing their
sides.
Barons! put in pawn castles, and towns, and cities before anyone makes
war on us.
Papiol, be glad to go speedily to "Yea and Nay", and tell him
there's too much peace about.[1]
When Richard (by then King) and
Philip delayed setting out on the Third Crusade, he chided them in songs praising
the heroic defence of Tyre by Conrad
of Montferrat (Folheta,
vos mi prejatz que eu chan and Ara sai eu de pretz quals l'a plus gran).
When Richard was released from captivity after being suspected of Conrad's
murder, Bertran welcomed his return with Ar ven la coindeta sazos.
Ironically, one of Bertran's sources of income was from the market of Châlus-Cabrol, where Richard was fatally wounded in 1199.
·
Later years and death
Widowed for the second time c. 1196,
Bertran became a monk and entered the Cistercian abbey of Dalon at Sainte-Trie in the
Works
His œuvre consists of about 47
works, 36 unambiguously attributed to him in the manuscripts, and 11 uncertain
attributions. Several melodies survive, and some of his songs have been
recorded by Sequentia, Gérard Zuchetto and his Troubadours Art Ensemble, and the Martin Best Mediæval Ensemble, who released an album of songs by "Dante
Troubadours".
Family
Bertran de Born married twice. By
his first wife, Raimonda, he had two sons (both knighted in 1192) and a
daughter:
- Bertran, also a troubadour, still living in 1223.
- Itier, who
died in 1237.
- Aimelina, who married Seguin de Lastours.
By his second wife, Philippa, he had
two more sons:
- Constantine, who became a monk at Dalon with his
father.
- Bertran the Younger, who was still living in
1252.
Later literary
image
According to his later vida
(a romanticised short biography attached to his songs), Henry
II believed Bertran
had fomented the rebellion of his son Henry
the Young King. As
a result, Dante
Alighieri portrayed
him in the Inferno as a sower of schism, punished in
the ninth bolgia of the eighth circle of Hell (Canto XXVIII), carrying his severed head like a lantern. Gustave Doré depicts this in his illustrations
to the Divine
Comedy.
Dante's depiction of him influenced
later literary works. In her epic poem Cœur de Lion (1822), Eleanor
Anne Porden
portrays him fomenting discord in the Third Crusade and, because of his remorse
over his involvement with Richard's imprisonment, becoming a hermit. He also
figures as a minor character in Maurice Hewlett's novel The Life and Death of
Richard Yea-and-Nay (1900), depicted unflatteringly. He is described as
"a man of hot blood, fumes and rages", with "a grudging
spirit". One character dismisses him thus: "Great poet he was, great
thief, and a silly fool."
His memory was better served by Ezra Pound, who translated some of his songs
and also based several original poems around him and his works, notably Na
Audiart (1908), Sestina: Altaforte (1909), and Near Périgord (1915).
There are also allusions to him in some of the Cantos. Via the influence
of Pound's Na Audiart, he is also mentioned in Sorley MacLean's poem, A' Bhuaile Ghreine (The
Sunny Fold).
He was the subject of a 1936 play Bertran
de Born by Jean Valmy-Baisse, to which Darius Milhaud wrote incidental music. He later reworked the music into
his Suite
provençale.[2]
Paul Auster mentions De Born in his novel Invisible
(2009), where the main character meets a Frenchman named Born, and corrects a
translation of one of Bertran's war poems. This appeared before as a
translation by Paul Auster, in The Nation.
Notes
1. In Robert Kehew (ed.) The Lark in the Morning, pp. 144-45
2. Naxos: MILHAUD: La Creation du monde / Le Boeuf sur le toit / Suite
provencale
Works
· Gérard Gouiran (ed. and trans.), L’Amour et la
Guerre: L’Oeuvre de Bertran de Born, 2 vols. (Aix en Provence & Marseille,
1985)
· William D. Padden,
jr., Tilde Sankovitch & Patricia H. Stäblein (ed. and transl.), The
Poems of the Troubadour Bertran de Born (Berkeley, Los Angeles &
London, 1986)
· Complete works (external link)
· Works, translated by James H. Donalson (external link)
References
· Dante Alighieri, The
Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri, Inferno, trans. Allen Mandelbaum, (Bantam
Classics 1982) ISBN 0-553-21339-3
· Maurice Hewlett, The Life & Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay (London, 1900) (external link to Project Gutenberg text)
· Robert Kehew (ed.)
Lark in the Morning: The Verses of the Troubadours; translated by Ezra
Pound, W D Snodgrass & Robert Kehew (Chicago, 2005) ISBN 0-226-42933-4
· Ezra Pound, Poems
& Translations (New York, 2003)
· This article
includes material from the Dictionnaire universel d'histoire et de géographie
Bouillet/Chassang.
· Thomas B. Costain,
"The Conquering Family", Doubleday & Co. Library of Congress
Catalog Card Number 62-20488, pp. 121-124
External links
· English translation of Bertran de Born's Bel m'es quan
vei[permanent dead
link]- translated by Jon Corelis
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário