Old French Romances
Old French Romances
Book Excerpt
t a few folk-tales, and at
least one folk-song. The Romance of the Violet, by Gerbert de
Montruil, circa 1225, derives its name from the mother's mark of the
heroine, which causes her husband to lose his bet. This was probably
the source of Boccaccio's novel (ii. 9), from which Shakespeare's
more immediately grew. The Gaelic version of this incident,
collected by Campbell (The Chest, No. ii.), is clearly not of folk
origin, but derived directly or indirectly from Boccaccio, in whom
alone the Chest is found. Yet it is curious that, practically, the
same story as the Romance of the Violet is found among folk-songs in
modern Greece and in Modern Scotland. In Passow's collection of
Romaic Folk Songs there is one entitled Maurianos and the King, which
is in substance our story; and it is probably the existence of this
folk-song which causes M. Gaston Paris to place our tale among the
romances derived from Byzantium. Yet Motherwell in his Minstrelsy
has a ballad entitled Reedisdale and Wise William, which has
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