About This Book
A young nobleman becomes consumed by love for a woman during a prolonged siege; an intermediary engineers their meetings and a tender, eloquent courtship follows. The poem follows the unfolding psychology and rhetoric of desire, showing how persuasion, social circumstance, and the caprices of Fortune carry the lovers from hopeful intimacy to separation when she is sent away and later takes another partner. It meditates on fidelity and betrayal and on how language, chance, and public pressures shape both the rise and the undoing of love.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
Chaucer for Children: A Golden Key
by Geoffrey Chaucer
Chaucer's Works, Volume 1 — Romaunt of the Rose; Minor Poems
by Geoffrey Chaucer
Chaucer's Works, Volume 2 — Boethius and Troilus
by Geoffrey Chaucer
Chaucer's Works, Volume 3 — The House of Fame; The Legend of Good Women; The Treatise on the Astrolabe; The Sources of the Canterbury Tales
by Geoffrey Chaucer
Chaucer's Works, Volume 4 — The Canterbury Tales
by Geoffrey Chaucer
Chaucer's Works, Volume 5 — Notes to the Canterbury Tales
by Geoffrey Chaucer
You May Also Like
6 picks
"1914"
by John Oxenham
"All's Well"; or, Alice's Victory
by Emily Sarah Holt
"Ask Mamma"; or, The Richest Commoner In England
by Robert Smith Surtees
"Bones": Being Further Adventures in Mr. Commissioner Sanders' Country
by Edgar Wallace
"Captains Courageous": A Story of the Grand Banks
by Rudyard Kipling
"Captains Courageous": A Story of the Grand Banks
by Rudyard Kipling