The Palyce of Honour
glossary.attributions_other
- Gavin Douglas
- Author
- David J. Parkinson
- Editor
- description
Composed at the turn of the sixteenth century amid Scotland’s growing sense of its own cultural and linguistic distinctiveness, Gavin Douglas’s The Palyce of Honour ingeniously combines such diverse materials as biblical tradition, Ovidian and Chaucerian poetry, and Scottish history and politics to produce a distinctively Scottish rendering of the medieval dream vision genre. Its dreamer, a would-be poet of love who dreams of divine figures from Greek mythology processing on horseback through a wilderness, travels with the Muses to the mountain palace of the god Honour, the judge of traitors and usurpers. Written in a genre associated with divine truth, Douglas’s dream vision champions literature as the best means of instilling in rulers the spiritual lessons, moral edification, and knowledge of the classical past that are essential to kingly power. The present edition furnishes readers with historical context, extensive glosses and notes, and a guide to the Scots language.
- forms
- Poetry
- languages
- Scots
- time periods
- 16th Century
- categories
- Debate poetry, Dream vision, Dream vision (Love), Legacy HTML, Nine Worthies
- additional information
- Cover image: Detail of title page of Palice of Honour, by Gawyn Douglas. A facsimile of the 1579 edition. Edited by John G. Kinnear. Photo courtesy of the National Library of Scotland, used under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. Cover design by Linda K. Judy. First edition published in 1992; Second edition published in 2018.