Chaucer from Prentice to Poet: The Metaphor of Love in Dream Visions and "Troilus and Criseyde"
- Author / Editor
- Condren, Edward I.
Chaucer from Prentice to Poet: The Metaphor of Love in Dream Visions and "Troilus and Criseyde"
- Published
- Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2008.
- Physical Description
- xiv, 239 pp.
- Description
- Condren explores similarities of theme and technique in BD, PF, HF and TC, focusing on numerical composition and Chaucer's "self-dialogue" on poetry and love. Biographical reading of BD reveals that the man in black is not Gaunt but the dreamer's own mourning self; the poem was originally written to commemorate Queen Philippa and adjusted later to Blanche. The "hidden code" of PF affirms the theme of harmony as a form of Neoplatonic love. HF is a contemplation of what constitutes "poetic truth" and was written as a "formal prologue" to TC, the man of "auctorite" being Chaucer himself. TC is a "metaliterary construct" in which the characters serve as aspects of the composition process. Pandarus speaks Troilus's thoughts, and close reading discloses sexual innuendoes in speeches of the two lovers.
- Chaucer Subjects
- Chaucer's Life
- Book of the Duchess
- Parliament of Fowls
- House of Fame
- Troilus and Criseyde