Venus’ Owne Clerk: Chaucer’s Debt to the Confessio Amantis

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BRILL, 2007 M01 1 - 488 pages
Venus’ Owne Clerk: Chaucer’s Debt to the “Confessio Amantis” will appeal to all those who value a bit of integration of Chaucer and Gower studies. It develops the unusual theme that the Canterbury Tales were signally influenced by John Gower’s Confessio Amantis, resulting in a set-up which is entirely different from the one announced in the General Prologue. Lindeboom seeks to show that this results from Gower’s call, at the end of his first redaction of the Confessio, for a work similar to his – a testament of love. Much of the argument centres upon the Wife of Bath and the Pardoner, who are shown to follow Gower’s lead by both engaging in confessing to all the Seven Deadly Sins while preaching a typically fourteenth-century sermon at the same time. While not beyond speculation at times, the author offers his readers a well-documented and tantalizing glimpse of Chaucer turning away from his original concept for the Canterbury Tales and realigning them along lines far closer to Gower.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
One Chaucers Changing Design of the Canterbury Tales
3
Two Towards Composing a Testament of Love
45
Three The Sergeant and Man of Law as Gower
123
Four The Testament of Love
147
Five Confession Sin and the Wife of Bath
227
Six The Pardoners Confession of Sin
295
Seven The Wife of Baths Sermon
319
Eight The Pardoners Double Sermon
395
Conclusion
437
Reference
461
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