Three days ago all I knew almost nothing of this couple whose names are famously linked. I knew that they lived in the Middle Ages and wrote philosophical letters. Now I know their story and how it illustrates the punishment in store for those who step outside the strict sexual mores of the times.
The focus of the book is on Abelard. He is a teacher, logician and writer of treatises, poems, books and hymns. While he was a very popular teacher, he must have a severe personality problem because wherever he went he created enemies. He relies on his patrons to help him find or found a new school when he wears out his welcome each posting. At one place his peers tried to poison him, (but this is not the worst that happened). Like many iconoclasts he is a celebrity of his profession and day.
Heloise’s very modern outlook comes through. She doesn’t want a forced marriage, nor to live in a convent, but both were foisted on her once a son resulted from the romance with Abelard. She refuses to feel guilty for what society sees as a sin. She knows that as an abbess (to which she rises to in her forced career), she is an actress; this is not her calling. Her self-awareness is an unusual trait for the time. She seems to be able to do what Abelard cannot… get along with people.
The author attributes a modern outlook to Abelard as well. He doesn’t have the misogynism of his day. He takes the time to deal with the issues of women in religious life, such as the authority of the abbess, what the nuns should wear and how much wine is appropriate. His main focus though is defining the relationship of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit and the meaning of sin through logic.
While the purpose of this book is to introduce recently found letters, and these are mentioned, the book tells the story such that you don’t have to know about the previous letters. The role of the new letters is so unobtrusive that without flipping back, I can’t recount how they change or enhance the original story or its interpretation.
There are descriptions of Paris, the geographical borders of France, the King's role in relationship to lands now part of France and the changes in monastic life at the time. You learn who is in power and who is not. In the course of these events, Eleanor of Aquitaine marries Louis VII. The Second Crusade, for which Abelard’s powerful enemy Bernard of Clairvaux is a key stimulus, is only a few years in the offing.
If you are knowledgeable about the time or about this couple, you will probably know most of the content. I recommend this for those interested in the times or this couple and do not already know much about their fascinating story.