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Dreaming into the World of Joan of
Arc and her Prince
By Robert Moss
Dreams guide us to the
necessary past, the history it is useful and timely to know.
Sometimes dream clues help us to get to the understory, the
deeper logic of events that may be missing from the texts.
A few years ago, my dreams
opened an adventure in medieval France, and a window into
understanding the practice of the voyantes of ancient Gaul,
who were often tree seers and to whom Joan of Arc may have belonged,
at least in her natural mode of visioning.
I often dream in French, the
language of my ancestors just a thousand years ago, and often find
myself in France in my dreams. In 2001, I woke from my dreams with
just a single word as a keepsake – the French word chantepleure.
The word literally means “sings and cries”. From the dictionary, I
learned that it is an old name for a kind of sieve or filter or
watering can. I had no idea why this term had come through to me in
a dream, until three years later..
On an afternoon in
September 2004, I lay down for a nap. I lay on my back, hands folded
over my chest – the approved position (called gisant) for a
medieval knight approaching death, according to Philip Ariès, whom I
had been reading as part of my research for my
Dreamer’s Book of the Dead.
I was immediately caught up in a powerful vision in
which I seemed to enter the perspective of a medieval French
nobleman as he embarked upon his after-death experiences.
I saw him laid out in a church
or chapel, among other sarcophagi with figures carved in high relief
on the stone lids.
To his left, “devils”
appeared, capering around the church on cloven hoofs. Some of them
looked like gargoyles. One had hideous animal features, something
between a boar and an ass, plus little horns. I realized that these
monstrosities had been created by the deformed imagination of the
church; they seemed comical to me.
The nobleman also seemed
fearless, but he took these things a little more seriously. He
wanted to take up a sword – a large one materialized in his hand –
and fight the “devils”. Ghost knights took up positions around his
tomb to defend and support him. They came like giant armored
sleepwalkers, moving like automata.
Two paths opened before the
dead prince. In a beam of light rising into the sky, he saw a
radiant female figure who reminded him of a woman he had celebrated
in songs of courtly love. In this moment, I knew that he had been
capable of great love, and that he loved poetry, as writer and
patron.
He was drawn to the woman in
the light, but also drawn to a huge warhorse, a white charger
armored for battle. Matching armor was there for him. He wanted to
carry on old battles. I noticed a great white banner, with gold
fleurs de lys.
Torn between choices, the
prince’s energy began to divide. I felt the fibers stretch and
separate, like fabric pulled apart under high pressure.
As I began to come back from
the vision, I was eager to know his identity. I knew he was of the
house of Orleans, perhaps a Duke of Orleans. I knew that he loved
the city of Blois, and used its name as a title. I knew that he was
a poet and a lover. I knew that the word gonfalonier or
gonfalonière featured in his story.
Research was clearly
required! I did an overnight search online, and in my own library,
and discovered that Count of Blois was one of the titles of the
Dukes of Orleans. It was held by the first Duc d
Orléans, Louis, and his son Charles d’
Orléans, a contemporary of Joan of Arc and an
accomplished poet, held by some to be “the father of French lyric
poetry”. The word gonfalonier literally means “standard
bearer”. It might be a reference to Joan of Arc, who was famous for
carrying her own banner into battle.
I went into the used
bookstore on the corner the next day, intending to look for a
biography of Joan of Arc.
From the doorway, at eye
level on the European History shelves, I saw a book titled
Charles d’
Orléans,
Prince and Poet, which proved to be a literate narrative
biography by Edith Macleod, head of the French section of Britain’s
Ministry of Information during World War II.
I took the biography
home and very soon stumbled upon the mysterious word from my “old”
dream – chantepleure.
There was a picture of one in the book: a long-necked
globular vessel spouting large tear-shaped drops from multiple holes
in the bottom. The text explained that Charles’ mother, Valentina
Visconti, adopted the chantepleure as the emblem of her grief
after the brutal slaying of Charles’ father, Duke Louis, by axe
murderers hired by John, Duke of Burgundy (Jean-sans-Peur). The
driving purpose of Charles’ life for many years – one fight he could
not abandon – was to exact justice for his father’s murder.
An odd, archaic word, first
surfacing in dream or vision, seemed to be putting me on a path of
connection with dramas and personalities from a different era.
The synchronicity riff grew
stronger, leaving me amazed though not necessarily surprised. The
day after I picked up the book, I flew to Seattle where a friend was
organizing a workshop for me. When she met me at the airport, she
told me that a man had called from Paris that same day to ask
whether there was room for him in my workshop. She told him there
was, and he announced he would fly in.
The man from Paris was
charming and cultured. He explained that he had established a
foundation devoted to alternative healing and spirituality. Would I
be willing to let him sponsor a program for me in France. Where?
“The retreat will be held at a chateau near Orleans, associated with
Joan of Arc,” he told me.
Naturally, we found a gap in my
schedule, and agreed that I would lead a program in the region of
Charles d’Orléans
and Joan of Arc the following
summer.
By now, the play of dreams
and synchronicity had driven me to further research. I learned that
the Maid of Orleans launched her crusade in the cause of Charles d’Orléans,
the “prince across the water” who had been taken prisoner by the
English after the French rout at Agincourt and remained a captive in
England for nearly two decades.
The chateau where my workshop
took place was forty minutes drive from Charles’s beloved city of
Blois, where he established one of the greatest libraries of
medieval Europe and held poetry competitions.
I found the scene from my
vision of his burial in the church that forms part of the chateau at
Blois. This chateau is guarded by the fiercest gargoyles I have ever
seen. Some look like souls in torment, avid to pull others into
their howling hells. Looking up at them, where they leap with the
flying buttresses, I recognized figures from my vision of the
after-death experiences of a medieval prince of Orleans (whom I now
believe to be Charles), confronted with the demons and angels of the
medieval imagination, at his moment of choice between different
paths. On the wall of the church that holds Charles’ tomb is a
plaque honoring Joan of Arc, the seeress who led an army in his
name….
Our host at the chateau told
me there was a local tradition that Joan of Arc had spent a night on
the estate on her way to the relief of the city of Orleans, her most
celebrated victory. Would I like to see the tree where Joan was
reputed to have slept?
We crossed rough ground
through a deer wood to a tree she identified as a chataignier,
or “sweet chestnut”. It had survived the lightning. She called it
L’Arbre de la Dame. Would I please give my intuitions?
I stood with the tree, holding
it and leaning my head against its trunk.
Immediately, I received a
vision in brilliant, living color, of a knight wearing a white
surcoat with the figures of three red lions over his breastplate. An
English knight; I was sure. He wore a coronet over his helmet, whose
visor was open. A nobleman, then, a duke or an earl. But why was I
looking at an English knight?
As I continued to look into
the scene, other figures appeared. A massing of soldiers around a
walled city. I realized that I was looking at the positions of the
English besiegers of Orleans as Joan might have seen them,
performing a psychic scout before she led the French into battle.
How did she see this way? How
exactly did she receive her inspiration?
No sooner had I formed the
question in my mind than I sensed a greater-than-human being
approaching from above and behind, descending in a beating of wings.
I felt its intent driving home, like an arrow or a bee-sting, at the
nape of the neck. Le cou, an inner voice confirmed. I felt no
pain, but sensed the pain Joan might have felt, in her visioning –
and later learned that before she marched to Orleans, she predicted
that she would be wounded by an arrow, as she was indeed, in the
field.
At her tree of vision, I
sensed a continuity between Joan of Arc and the ancient Gallic
female seers who climbed into trees, or into towers constructed from
tree limbs, to scout and direct battles for their warriors. Julius
Caesar regarded these ancient “remote viewers” as his most
formidable adversaries.
A deeper story began to unfold,
of a tree seer in a deer forest, linked to an ancient line of
seeresses…The significance of sacred trees in Joan’s earlier life is
there in the documents (though I could find no reference to the
chataignier). Joan’s accusers at her trial made much of her
connection, as a child, with a “Fairy Tree” – called l’Arbre aux
Dames – a giant beech in an oak forest near her home town in
Lorraine.
My continuing researches resulted
in a chapter titled “Joan of Arc and the Tree Seers” in my Secret
History of Dreaming. But I suspect there is a further chapter
yet to unfold, involving the poet-prince of Orleans who created one
of the greatest libraries in Europe at his chateau in Blois.
©
Robert Moss. All rights reserved. |