Confessio Amantis, Volumes 1-3
glossary.attributions_other
- John Gower
- Author
- Russell A. Peck
- Editor
- Andrew Galloway
- Translator
- description
Though never quite matching the popularity and scholarly acclaim of his friend and contemporary Geoffrey Chaucer, the prolific English poet John Gower produced an impressive body of poetry in Anglo-Norman French, Latin, and Middle English and has earned his reputation as one of the great English poets of the fourteenth century. His Confessio Amantis, or “The Lover’s Confession,” ranks among the Middle English texts most frequently copied before the advent of the printing press. The poem both follows and builds upon the model of fourteenth-century Christian confessions by shaping the lover’s account into a frame narrative for a collection of shorter poetic tales, pairing courtly-love reinterpretations of the seven deadly sins with moralizing narratives drawn from biblical, classical, and medieval sources. Volume 1 of this three-volume edition presents the Prologue, Book 1, and Book 8 of Gower’s poem; Volume 2 presents Books 2, 3 and 4; and Volume 3 presents Books 5, 6 and 7. The three volumes include translations of Latin components, alongside a comprehensive bibliography, glosses, and explanatory notes.
- forms
- Poetry
- languages
- English, Middle (1100–1500), Latin
- time periods
- 14th Century
- categories
- Complaint (Poetry), Dream vision, Dream vision (Boethian), Dream vision (Love), Debate poetry, Exemplum, Utopian fiction, Matter of Rome/Troy, Romance, Apology, Legacy HTML, Advice for princes, Alexander the Great, Arthuriana, Matter of England, Nine Worthies
- additional information
- Cover design by Linda K. Judy. Volume 1 first published in 2000, second edition published in 2006. Volume 2 first published in 2003, second edition published in 2013. Volume 3 published in 2004. Cover design by Linda K. Judy.