Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Vox Clamantis by John Gower: "The Voice of One Crying"
View through CrossRef
The first English translation into verse of the full Vox Clamantis, with explanatory notes.
John Gower's Vox Clamantis is one of the major poetic achievements of the Middle Ages. Its subject matter ranges from his dream-vision account of the Peasants' Revolt of 1381 to sharp critiques of the clergy, merchants, and lawyers, all with the intention of teaching the lessons of the past as a guide to the present. In Gower's view, everything that is and happens must be read and interpreted for the guidance God provides: history, Scripture and nature are replete with auguries sent by God to guide rulers if they but learn to read them. Ultimately for Gower, rulers - and we ourselves - are responsible for our own choices, for good or ill.
This line-by-line translation from the original Latin into Modern English is intended for a wide audience, and to be easily readable by scholars and non-scholars alike. It replicates Gower's Latin meter as closely as possible in English, uses straightforward language, and clarifies many difficult points of medieval legal theory, Classical allusion, and theological interpretation heretofore left unexplained in any previous attempts, full or partial, to translate the poem. Extensive notes trace Gower's sources, from Ovid to Peter Riga's Aurora to Alexander Nequam's De Naturis rerum to Nigel Wireker's Speculum Stultorum and the Bible, among many others. Classical and Biblical allusions are identified and fully but succinctly explained. This book also includes the "Letter to Arundel", translated in verse for the first time.
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Title: Vox Clamantis by John Gower: "The Voice of One Crying"
Description:
The first English translation into verse of the full Vox Clamantis, with explanatory notes.
John Gower's Vox Clamantis is one of the major poetic achievements of the Middle Ages.
Its subject matter ranges from his dream-vision account of the Peasants' Revolt of 1381 to sharp critiques of the clergy, merchants, and lawyers, all with the intention of teaching the lessons of the past as a guide to the present.
In Gower's view, everything that is and happens must be read and interpreted for the guidance God provides: history, Scripture and nature are replete with auguries sent by God to guide rulers if they but learn to read them.
Ultimately for Gower, rulers - and we ourselves - are responsible for our own choices, for good or ill.
This line-by-line translation from the original Latin into Modern English is intended for a wide audience, and to be easily readable by scholars and non-scholars alike.
It replicates Gower's Latin meter as closely as possible in English, uses straightforward language, and clarifies many difficult points of medieval legal theory, Classical allusion, and theological interpretation heretofore left unexplained in any previous attempts, full or partial, to translate the poem.
Extensive notes trace Gower's sources, from Ovid to Peter Riga's Aurora to Alexander Nequam's De Naturis rerum to Nigel Wireker's Speculum Stultorum and the Bible, among many others.
Classical and Biblical allusions are identified and fully but succinctly explained.
This book also includes the "Letter to Arundel", translated in verse for the first time.
Related Results
“The bokes duelle”: John Gower, Futurity, and the Development of the Late Medieval Archive
“The bokes duelle”: John Gower, Futurity, and the Development of the Late Medieval Archive
Abstract: Over the course of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, English archives became increasingly well organized. Late medieval record keepers catalogued collections and mo...
John Gower, Squire of Kent, the Peasants' Revolt, and the Visio Anglie
John Gower, Squire of Kent, the Peasants' Revolt, and the Visio Anglie
Abstract
Though the status of John Gower as a squire of Kent is acknowledged, it has been generally assumed that the poet sold the manor of Aldington by Thurnham, hi...
Oscar Wilde, Ronald Gower, and the Shakespeare Monument
Oscar Wilde, Ronald Gower, and the Shakespeare Monument
Le mercredi 10 octobre 1888, Oscar Wilde figurait parmi les orateurs qui prononcèrent l’éloge de Sir Ronald Gower (1845-1916) lors de l’inauguration de l’imposant monument, érigé e...
Historians on John Gower
Historians on John Gower
John Gower's poetry offers an important and immediate response to the turbulent events of his day. The essays here examine his life and his works from an historical angle, bringing...
Historians on John Gower
Historians on John Gower
John Gower's poetry offers an important and immediate response to the turbulent events of his day. The essays here examine his life and his works from an historical angle, bringing...
John Gower Copies Geoffrey Chaucer
John Gower Copies Geoffrey Chaucer
Abstract
Gower borrows from Chaucer's legends of Cleopatra and of Thisbe in the Legend of Good Women. He copies Chaucer in a way similar both to how medieval readers...
AUGE ELECTORAL DE LA EXTREMA DERECHA ESPAÑOLA. ANÁLISIS DE LA IRRUPCIÓN Y EVOLUCIÓN DEL VOTO DE VOX (2018-2019)
AUGE ELECTORAL DE LA EXTREMA DERECHA ESPAÑOLA. ANÁLISIS DE LA IRRUPCIÓN Y EVOLUCIÓN DEL VOTO DE VOX (2018-2019)
El presente trabajo de investigación pretende ser una recapitulación pormenorizada desde los postulados clásicos de la Ciencia Política cuya finalidad será la de ordenar y explicar...
Bohemian Gower
Bohemian Gower
The English poet John Gower has long been recognized as a Ricardian, that is, a poet in the artistic orbit of England’s King Richard II. This essay explores the importance of Richa...

