The Trials and Joys of Marriage
glossary.attributions_other
- John Lydgate
- Author
- William Dunbar
- Author
- Adam of Cobsam
- Author
- John Wyclif
- Author
- Unknown
- Author
- Eve Salisbury
- Editor
- description
This edition collects twenty-four disparate Middle English texts, published between the late-thirteenth and early-sixteenth centuries, which all center around the theme of marriage. Eve Salisbury organizes them into three sections: satire and fabliaux, didactic prose and exempla, and secular lyrics. While a fabliau like Dame Sirith presents traditionally lusty lovers aided by trickery, others like A Talk of Ten Wives on Their Husbands' Ware—in which a group of married women complain about their husbands’ lack of sexual skill—suggest more subversive viewpoints. Didactic texts enshrine orthodox, sometimes explicitly misogynist, attitudes about marriage; these include excerpts from the popular Gesta Romanorum, a Wycliffite sermon, and treatises on educating children. Secular lyrics move into the realm of comic and carnivalesque song, where conventional stereotypes of women and men could be overturned without threatening the status quo. Proto-feminist ideals such as consent between spouses, the value of domestic labor, and female sexuality are all explored throughout.
- forms
- Poetry
- languages
- English, Middle (1100–1500)
- time periods
- 13th Century, 14th Century, 15th Century, 16th Century
- categories
- Ballad, Epistolary poetry, Chaucer, Geoffrey, Fabliau, Exemplum, Fable, Bourde, Sermon, Wisdom literature, Legacy HTML, Lyric poetry, Complaint (Poetry), Authorship uncertain
- additional information
- Cover design by Linda K. Judy
- contents
- General Introduction
- Satire and Fabliaux in Verse and Prose
- Didactic Prose and Exempla
- Emperator Felicianus (How a Wife Employed a Necromancer to Cause the Death of Her Husband, and How He Was Saved by a Clerk), Gesta Romanorum
- Godfridus a Wise Emperoure (Of the Magic Ring, Brooch, and Cloth, Which an Emperor Left to His Son: How He Lost Them, and How They Were Recovered), Gesta Romanorum
- The Punished of Adulterers or The Bawd and the Adulterers, Gesta Romanorum
- Of Weddid Men and Wifis and of Here Children Also
- John Lydgate, Payne and Sorowe of Evyll Maryage
- How the Goode Wife Taught Hyr Doughter
- How the Goode Man Taght Hys Sone
- Emperator Felicianus (How a Wife Employed a Necromancer to Cause the Death of Her Husband, and How He Was Saved by a Clerk), Gesta Romanorum
- Select Secular Lyrics of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries