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5 - ‘Ce mauvais tabellion’: Satanic and Marian Textuality in Deguileville's Pèlerinage de l'Âme

from Part II - Authority

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2013

Marco Nievergelt
Affiliation:
Maître-Assistant in Early English Literature in the English department of the University of Lausanne
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Summary

As Fabienne Pomel's contribution to this volume demonstrates vividly, Deguileville's corpus reads like nothing so much as a collection of legal documents. The saga of Deguileville's poetic persona. Here distinguished by the Latinized name Guillermus de Deguilevilla, resembles a case file; both narrator and author are put on trial repeatedly, and poetic and juridical authority are closely related. Two instances of judgment stand out in particular, found respectively in PVH2 and in PA. First, in PVH2. Guillermus loses a judgment aboard the Ship of Religion, from which he is exiled as a result and deprived of his good name. Because of the poet's insistence on the (pseudo-) autobiographical nature of the episode, modern scholars have usually seen in it a reflection of Deguileville's own legal troubles, presumably at the hands of fellow monks at Chaalis. And because Deguileville linked this affair to the high-profile literary scandals of other authors – namely, Abelard and Ovid – it is plausible that he suffered for something he wrote. If so, this would doubtless have been the earlier PVH1, which the 1355 version (PVH2) was destined to correct and supplement.

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The Pèlerinage Allegories of Guillaume de Deguileville
Tradition, Authority and Influence
, pp. 113 - 128
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2013

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