The Palice of Honour


Book Description




Gavin Douglas, The Palyce of Honour


Book Description

At the end of the fifteenth century, Gavin Douglas devised his ambitious dream vision The Palyce of Honour in part to signal a new scope to Scottish literary culture. While deeply versed in Chaucer's writings, Douglas identified Ovid's Metamorphoses as a particularly timely model in the light of contemporary humanist scholarship. For all its comedy, The Palyce of Honour stands as a reminder to James IV of Scotland that poetry casts a powerful light upon the arts of rule.




Kingship and Love in Scottish Poetry, 1424–1540


Book Description

Looking at late medieval Scottish poetic narratives which incorporate exploration of the amorousness of kings, this study places these poems in the context of Scotland's repeated experience of minority kings and a consequent instability in governance. The focus of this study is the presence of amatory discourses in poetry of a political or advisory nature, written in Scotland between the early fifteenth and the mid-sixteenth century. Joanna Martin offers new readings of the works of major figures in the Scottish literature of the period, including Robert Henryson, William Dunbar, and Sir David Lyndsay. At the same time, she provides new perspectives on anonymous texts, among them The Thre Prestis of Peblis and King Hart, and on the works of less well known writers such as John Bellenden and William Stewart, which are crucial to our understanding of the literary culture north of the Border during the period under discussion.




Gavin Douglas, 'The Aeneid' (1513) Volume 2


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The 13th book of the Aeneid is by Maffeo Vegio.










Premodern Scotland


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Offers fresh and ground-breaking research into themes of good self- and public governance in medieval Scottish and English literature.




Reading Dido


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The Cambridge History of English Poetry


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A literary-historical account of English poetry from Anglo-Saxon writings to the present.




Princes and Princely Culture


Book Description

The essays in this volume discuss princely courts north of the Alps and Pyrenees between 1450-1650 as focal points for products of medieval and renaissance culture such as literature, music, political ideology, social and governmental structures, the fine arts and devotional practice.