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Twenty-Four Lays from the French Middle Ages

Twenty-Four Lays from the French Middle Ages

Author: Glyn S. Burgess Leslie C. Brook
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Publication Date: 01 Feb 2017
ISBN-13: 9781781383377
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Description


This prose translation of twenty-four lays from the French Middle Ages brings to the general reader as well as to scholars a complement to the twelve well-known lays by Marie de France, the possible creator of the genre. These lays are mostly anonymous, and the majority, but by no means all of them, are, like Marie’s lays, centred on a love interest of some kind in a variety of settings. But, unlike Marie’s lays, their treatment varies from the courtly and sophisticated to the comic or the tragic, thereby illustrating the range of poems covered by the term lai in twelfth- and thirteenth-century France. A significant number of these lays, based in the courtly world, contain supernatural elements or magic objects that are fundamental to the story as it is related, and sometimes the heroes leave the real world to dwell forever in an otherworldly domain. Other lays have a more mundane feel to them and seem closer to the fabliau in tone. In one instance, the lay of Haveloc, the tale owes more to legendary history than to pure fantasy. Overall, this collection stakes a claim to make an important contribution to the Medieval French lay within the wider European tradition of the short story and the literature of love.


Table of Contents


General Introduction
Manuscripts
Magic and Mystery
1. Melion
2. Tyolet
3. Graelent
4. Guingamor
5. Desiré
6. Doon
7. Espine
8. Tydorel
9. Trot
Fun and Games
10. Mantel
11. Cor
12. Aristote
13. Lecheor
14. Ignaure
15. Oiselet
16. Espervier
17. Nabaret
Passion and Tears
18. Piramus and Thisbe
19. Narcisus and Dané
Romance and Realism
20. The Chastelaine de Vergi
21. The Lai de l’Ombre
22. Amours
23. Conseil
The Lay as History
24. Haveloc
Bibliography
Index of Proper Names


Author Description


Glyn S. Burgess is Emeritus Professor of French at the University of Liverpool. His Penguin Classics edition of The Lais of Marie de France has sold more than 150,000 copies. He is co-author of The Roman de Troie by Benoît de Sainte-Maure (with Douglas Kelly, D. S. Brewer, 2017). In 1999 he was made a Chevalier des Palmes Académiques and he is an Honorary President of the International Courtly Literature Society. Leslie Brook is Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the University of Birmingham






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