Dreamwoven
11-04-2014, 05:53 AM
Edith Pargeter (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edith_Pargeter) (who also writes as Ellis Peters) was one of my favourite authors. She had a remarkable ability of writing novels which remain anchored in everyday life in the Middle Ages but which subtly include the sweep of history. Her stories are located in Shropshire and the Welsh Borders, reflecting her own background. I have read all the books on Brother Cadfael (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadfael) written under her name of Ellis Peters. I have also read the four volumes of The Brothers of Gwynedd (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edith_Pargeter#The_Brothers_of_Gwynedd_Quartet). But this is about the Heaven Tree Trilogy (http://www.stabenow.com/2011/11/28/the-heaven-tree-trilogy), easily the best of her work.
The Heaven Tree , The Green Branch and The Scarlet Seed comprise the trilogy. Set in the 13th century The Heaven Tree is so called as an allusion to the new architecture of soaring light-filled churches that were replacing the squat Norman style. Harry Talvace fled to France after he and his commoner friend Adam Boteler, Harry's breast brother being low-born, were held for shooting a deer. In France, Harry is inspired by the soaring churches and dreams of designing and building one. He meets a Welsh border Lord, Ralf Isambard who takes him on to design and build one for his border castle, Parfois, the seat of his Anglo-Welsh fiefdom. Isembard is a Marcher Lord (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcher_Lord) of the Kings of England, with estates also in France. This opportunity gives Harry Talvace the chance of a lifetime to become a Master Mason, and build the church of his dreams.
But Harry’s compassionate impulses make him a misfit in harsh feudal society. Rivalry grows between Harry and Isambard over Madonna Benedetta, an ex-courtesan who lives with the lord but loves Harry, although she knows that he loves the lass Gilleis, who now is pregnant with Harry's child.
The book is beautifully written, especially towards the end when Isembard grants Harry a last wish before execution by disembowelling by a skilled Gascon executioner.
Benedetta contrives to get Harry to wish for Benedetta to be his bedfellow for his last night before execution, involving a public denouement that deliberately humiliates Isembard in one of Edith Pargeter's most moving passages in the entire trilogy.
The Gascon's execution is never done, for Benedetta arranges for Harry to be shot by John the Fletcher, which he does. Isambard, in his jealousy condemns Madonna Benedetta to die with Harry, but she escapes and bears Harry’s son away with her. Harry's son is adopted by Llewellyn the Great, Prince of North Wales and is brought up in his household as his own son to revere his natural father after whom he is named. This sets the stage for Volume 2.
The Heaven Tree , The Green Branch and The Scarlet Seed comprise the trilogy. Set in the 13th century The Heaven Tree is so called as an allusion to the new architecture of soaring light-filled churches that were replacing the squat Norman style. Harry Talvace fled to France after he and his commoner friend Adam Boteler, Harry's breast brother being low-born, were held for shooting a deer. In France, Harry is inspired by the soaring churches and dreams of designing and building one. He meets a Welsh border Lord, Ralf Isambard who takes him on to design and build one for his border castle, Parfois, the seat of his Anglo-Welsh fiefdom. Isembard is a Marcher Lord (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcher_Lord) of the Kings of England, with estates also in France. This opportunity gives Harry Talvace the chance of a lifetime to become a Master Mason, and build the church of his dreams.
But Harry’s compassionate impulses make him a misfit in harsh feudal society. Rivalry grows between Harry and Isambard over Madonna Benedetta, an ex-courtesan who lives with the lord but loves Harry, although she knows that he loves the lass Gilleis, who now is pregnant with Harry's child.
The book is beautifully written, especially towards the end when Isembard grants Harry a last wish before execution by disembowelling by a skilled Gascon executioner.
Benedetta contrives to get Harry to wish for Benedetta to be his bedfellow for his last night before execution, involving a public denouement that deliberately humiliates Isembard in one of Edith Pargeter's most moving passages in the entire trilogy.
The Gascon's execution is never done, for Benedetta arranges for Harry to be shot by John the Fletcher, which he does. Isambard, in his jealousy condemns Madonna Benedetta to die with Harry, but she escapes and bears Harry’s son away with her. Harry's son is adopted by Llewellyn the Great, Prince of North Wales and is brought up in his household as his own son to revere his natural father after whom he is named. This sets the stage for Volume 2.