Alchemical Motifs in Chrétien’s Romances by Thomas Sharpe
On Chrétien de Troyes (fl.1160–1191) as an artful celebrator, Freeman (1979) writes: Renowned experts and a few enlightened laymen now concur that artificers – be they weavers, seamstresses, blacksmiths, sculptors, architects, apothecaries, even sorceresses – all engage in variants of the same fundamental processes whereby basic materials, though artfully reshaped according to the tastes and abilities of their makers, nonetheless betray the authoritative influence of earlier masters when submitted to the scrutiny of informed scholars... Now and then, we may even find an artful celebrator of the work of others.8 Progressing from a previous article concerning the goldsmith as a possible pseudonym for alchemist amongst a condemned Amalrician cleric16 – to an attempt to separate the subtle from the gross within a twelfth-century literary territory – we are, as with our approach to the article on the Templars,17 on thin scholarly ice. If we first separate the earth from the fire, the ice may support the alembic over the cold flame of esoteric decipherment;