Heloise (and her Abelard)

The best account of the story of Heloise and Abelard, the inspiration behind this poem, remains Helen’s Waddell’s Peter Abelard.


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Unhappy Heloise, as long as though breathest

It is decreed thou must love Abelard.


SHE HEARS WHAT HAS BEFALLEN HIM


So to her confines there comes a horseman,

Riding by night and in haste,

To leave for the cloistered girl

Irredeemable tidings – that her beloved,

Her eagle lover, is no more man.


She longs to run to him, to comfort him –

But how can she find comfort for this?

She waits for no word, no solace now;

Her only recourse and his command

To stay sequestered here for ever,

Refuse to love again now love is torn away.


SHE REPROACHES GOD


She could scream against the heavens

But is restrained, covering herself

With the coarse black cloth

Of anguish and celibacy.

She stands outside the dark chapel

But will not enter for very bitterness:


God, who turn from Your servant Abelard,

Do not expect me to turn to You;

Indeed I left You many months ago

When I gave my soul, my mind and body,

A living sacrifice to Abelard;

I burn now in the flame of my desire for him,

A dry fire never to be quenched:

I have no desire for You.


When I gaze at that tortured body on the cross

It is the blood of Abelard

Soaking into the loin cloth;

When I lift my eyes to Christ in glory

It is Abelard I see

Drawing all men to himself.

As David was to his Absalom

Am I to my Abelard:

Mother father lover husband wife –

All in all to him, my grief, my glory,

My everlasting torment, my most sweet reward –

It is to him I sacrifice

These remnants of transitory beauty,

These widowed nights and tedious days.


SHE RECALLS THEIR LOVE


When he used to come to me at night

In the days of our happy innocence,

When love seemed a private bliss

Before we learnt its power to hurt

And curiously enrage,

I knew him as no other woman had –

The mighty Abelard,

Casting off his learning with his clothes –


I touched his soft skin,

My tongue sought his …

I stroked the smoothness of his naked flesh,

Felt his hand explore my crevice …

But I must not think like this! – I dare not –

Such thoughts only feed my desperation:

My body yearns for him,

Can never now be satisfied.


No others loved like us

To whom love was a holy thing,

Our bodily union a sacrament:

The Church has called that blasphemy,

But I would shout it from the rooftops!

His kisses the breath of life to me,

His thrusting the rhythm of the universe.


SHE LONGS FOR HIM


When I had your body

I had no need of pictures;

Now my eyes caress you,

I press my lips against you every day,

Dear image of Abelard.


Sometimes you come to me in dreams –

But I open my eyes and see no Abelard;

I stretch out my arms to hold him –

He is not there;

I call him – he does not hear.


Interred in cold damp stone,

With dead obedience

I perform my vows,

Devoted to Abelard alone.


SHE THINKS OF HIS DOWNFALL AND OF THEIR SON


What darkness has been wrought by hatred

On one who would bring light to the mind,

Who in the creaking hull of Notre Dame

Strove to pierce the mists above the sea of faith –

Perhaps too soon to stop your shipwreck, Abelard.


Only months ago – such years it seems –

Hand in hand we stood in a meadow

While in the house your sister held our child;

Henceforth he will not see his parents –

Nuns and eunuchs have no sons –

Astrolabius, pray for your mother

Now, and at the hour of her death.


HER HYMN


They say you have attained

Some resignation – even peace –

Perhaps they say the same of me to you;

I say only initiates to despair

Can taste this deadly peace.


They say you speak of the suffering God,

Rejoice to suffer for His sake:

But Abelard, I cannot see it –

If there is a God

He has put out the eyes of my faith.


To my love I stay true,

To the remembrance of my earthly joy;

I desire no empty heaven:

Our love was our salvation, our eternal life,

Heaven was having you, my Abelard.


HE SPEAKS


Heloise, Heloise, Heloise …

Your voice in the whisper

Of running waters, your name

Breathed by the wind in the leaves …

Your Abelard is a broken vessel

For the love of God:

None stays for his comfort.


Now and then an image slips into my mind,

Unquiet in the midst of silence …

Heloise slipping from her clothes …

But memory drives me mad!

Shame presses me on every side.

I bear even to the altar

The burden of our guilty loves.


SHE REMONSTRATES WITH HIM


Is this the Abelard I loved? –

Trapped by a flesh-despising age?

Have you lost your mind through grief

So to torment yourself with blame?

You have no need to hide from God.


Abelard, if love is vice

I have no time for virtue:

If I believed the flames of hell awaited me

For having loved you, I would love you still.


HE BIDS HER FAREWELL


Write no more to me, Heloise, write no more …

Do not add to my miseries by your constancy.


To forget Heloise, to see her no more,

Is what heaven demands of Abelard.


Weep, my child, for your salvation –

No longer for your lover.


SHE SHAMES AN AGE THAT HAS NOT KNOWN HOW TO VALUE ABELARD


For twenty-one years have I lived after Abelard;

Rising each morning to watch by his tomb,

Praying each evening for death –

Now at last the time is near.


But can desire be fulfilled in heaven?

(My lover will not be in hell.)

Will he run to meet me, take me in his arms?

Or must my loneliness endure throughout eternity?


Will there come a time when our love, no more

Condemned, shines in glory? or will the name

Of Abelard never be spoken without tears? –


They shall be tears of shame

For what men did to him

And to his Heloise.


 


©Virginia Rounding, 1991

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Published on January 14, 2018 23:00
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