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John Lydgate's Fall of Princes - Narrative Tragedy in its Literary and Political Contexts (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R5,653
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John Lydgate's Fall of Princes - Narrative Tragedy in its Literary and Political Contexts (Hardcover, New)
Series: Oxford English Monographs
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The Benedictine monk John Lydgate was the most admired poet of the
fifteenth century. He received commissions from some of the most
powerful men in the land (including Henry V); he is spoken of with
constant admiration; manuscripts of his work are abundant; many of
his poems were put into print by England's earliest printers,
ensuring that his influence extended well into the sixteenth
century. The Fall of Princes, probably the longest poem in the
language, is arguably Lydgate's masterwork; yet, until now, it has
received only cursory critical attention. This book offers the
first extended discussion of the poem.
The Fall of Princes accumulates accounts of nearly 500 figures
from mythology and history (biblical, classical, and medieval) who
have fallen from their positions of fame and power into obscurity,
adversity, or poverty. In presenting these tragedies Lydgate probes
the causes of the reversal of their fortunes; how far can the
caprice of a blind Lady Fortune be blamed? How far are the
protagonists themselves responsible for their undoing? Most
pressingly of all, why is it that bad things happen to seemingly
innocent people? In drawing its conclusions about the downfalls of
powerful men and women, Lydgate's poem operates within the popular
medieval genre of "advice to princes" literature.
This book locates Lydgate's work within its contexts, exploring
the nature of his relationship with the uneasy Lancastrian dynasty
during the minority of Henry VI as well as his response to
contemporary conflicts between ecclesiastical and secular
authority. In particular, this book closely analyses Lydgate's
manipulations of his French source text, allowing readers to see in
detail forthe first time what it is that Lydgate was setting out to
achieve. Finally, the book identifies the readership of Lydgate's
poem in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, discussing its
influence on the evolution of narrative tragedy in English.
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