It tells the story of the knight Cliges and his love for his
uncle's wife, Fenice. Because of the story's de-romanticized
depiction of adultery, it has been called a criticism or parody of
the Tristan and Isolde romances. Cliges scholar Lucie Polak not
only verifies the Tristan and Isolde reworking found in the text,
but also suggests that Cliges may be modeled after Ovid's character
Narcissus.
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