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Le Songe Vert, BL Add. MS 34114 (the Spalding Manuscript), Bibliothèque de la ville de Clermont, MS 249 and John Gower

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 March 2023

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Summary

More than half a century ago Ethel Seaton speculated that Le Songe Vert, a little-known poem in French, ‘with all its pretty circumstances, its charmingly maternal Venus, its mystic lily, its modulations from black into the key of green’, deserved a wider and more receptive readership than just the two disdainful Frenchmen who alone, until Seaton herself, had noted the poem at all – especially since, in Seaton’s view, the unnamed poet was probably John Gower. Despite her high opinion of the poem’s merits, however, Seaton’s clarion seems to have thudded on deaf ears, and to have remained there. No one to my knowledge – not writing in English, at any rate – has heeded her call to read and appreciate Le Songe Vert, let alone think seriously about a date and an author. Working through a potentially important text in two relatively obscure but significant manuscripts seems a challenge that my esteemed friend Professor Takamiya might take up. I therefore offer what follows, with all humble respect, in his honour.

Le Songe Vert is a dream-vision of approximately 1,822 lines, in octosyllabic couplets. The ‘pretty circumstances’ noted by Seaton are many, and intricately interworked; but in essence the outline is as follows. There has been a plague from which a great number of people – including the narrator’s beloved – have died, and the narrator consequently wears black, a colour convenient to his mood as well. Seeking solace at Easter, he follows a river into an orchard where, overcome with grief, he faints. In his swoon he meets Venus, attended by two knights (Désir and Bon Espoir) and two ladies (Loiauté and Plaisance). Venus argues that it is time to take a new love, one she has selected for him and describes in detail. This lady seems familiar to him, and he protests, out of devotion to his dead beloved, but also because he believes this new lady would never love him. He faints again. Venus rouses him, Désir borrows a conserve called ‘Restorant’ from Merci and gives him five portions, which rouses him further. Venus shows him a vision of a/the beautiful lady, and while he stands amazed, he is stripped of his black clothes and dressed in green robes edged in blue, with a blue silk girdle and a hood stitched in golden hair.

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Middle English Texts in Transition
A Festschrift Dedicated to Toshiyuki Takamiya on his 70th birthday
, pp. 75 - 87
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2014

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