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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The End of the Middle Ages
>
The Scottish Chaucerians
> Henrysons Shorter Poems
The Testament of Cresseid
William Dunbar
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume II. The End of the Middle Ages.
X.
The Scottish Chaucerians
.
§ 7. Henrysons Shorter Poems.
The thirteen shorter poems which have been ascribed to Henryson are varied in kind and verse-form. The majority are of a reflective cast, dealing with such topics as Want of Wise Men, Age, Youth, Death, Hasty Credence and the liketopics which are the delight of the fifteenth century minor muse. There are allegorical poems, such as
The Bludy Serk,
with the inevitable
moralitas,
a religious piece on the annunciation, and
A Prayer for the Pest.
Two of the poems, the pastoral dialogue of
Robene
and
Makyne
and the burlesque
Sum Practysis of Medecyne,
deserve special mention for historical reasons; the former, too, for its individual excellence. The
estrif
between Robene (Robin) and Makyne (Malkin) develops a sentiment, thus expressed in the girss own words
The man that will nocht quhen he may
Sall haif nocht quhen he wald
which is probably an echo of the
pastourelles.
In literary craftsmanship, the poem excels its later and more elaborate analogue
The Nut Brown Maid.
The older and simpler language, and the ballad
timbre
(which runs throughout many of Henrysons minor poems) place
Robene and Makyne
almost entirely outside Chaucerian influence. This is even more obvious in
Sum Practysis of Medecyne;
and, for this reason, some have doubted Henrysons authorship. The divergence is, however, of no evidence against the ascription. Taken with the pieces the same type which are known to be by his contemporaries, it gives us an earlier link in the chain of popular alliterative (or neo-alliterative) verse which resisted the Chaucerian infusion and was destined to exert a strong influence upon later Scottish poetry. These burlesque pieces in Henryson, Dunbar and Douglas and, later, in Lyndsay (in each case a single and disconnected effort) appear to have been of the nature of experiments or exercises in whimsicality, perhaps as a relief from the seriousness or more orderly humour of the muse. The roughness in tone resembles that of the flytings," in which it is intentional, and, in many cases, without parallel in English literature. The persistence of this form throughout the century, and in places least expected, may supply an argument for James Is authorship of
Peblis to the Play
and
Christis Kirk on the Grene.
At least, the dissimilarity between these and the
Kingis Quair
would not, did other reasons not interfere, disprove that they came from the same pen.
16
16
Note 16
. See Chapter
XI.
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CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Testament of Cresseid
William Dunbar
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