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Roman de la Rose

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Mirth and Gladness lead a Dance in this miniature from a manuscript of the Roman de la Rose in the Bodleian Library (MS Douce 364, folio 8r).
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Mirth and Gladness lead a Dance in this miniature from a manuscript of the Roman de la Rose in the Bodleian Library (MS Douce 364, folio 8r).

French literature
French literary history
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16th century - 17th century
18th century -19th century
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The Roman de la Rose is a late medieval French poem styled as an allegorical dream vision.

It was written in two stages. The first 4058 lines, written by Guillaume de Lorris circa 1230, describe the attempts of a courtier to woo his beloved. This part of the story is set in a walled garden (a locus amoenus, one of the traditional topoi of epic and chivalric literature), the interior of which represents romance, the exterior everyday life. The rose of the title is seen as a symbol of the lady's love. It is unclear whether Lorris considered his version to be incomplete, but it was generally viewed as such. Around 1275, Jean de Meun composed an additional 21,780 lines. Meun's discussion of love is considered more philosophical and encyclopedic, but more misogynistic and bawdy. Still, much recent scholarship has argued for the essential unity of the work, which is how it was received by later medieval readers.

The work was both very popular and very controversial — one of the most widely read works in French for three centuries, it survives in dozens of illuminated manuscripts. Still, its emphasis on sensual language and imagery provoked attacks by Jean Gerson, Christine de Pizan and many other writers and moralists of the 14th and 15th centuries.

Part of the story was translated into Middle English as The Romaunt of the Rose, which had a great influence on English literature. Chaucer was familiar with the original French and translated portions into English. C.S. Lewis's 1936 study, Allegory of Love renewed interest in the poem.

See also

External links

Full text from Project Gutenberg: [Vol. 1], [Vol. 2]

 


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