DREAM VISION. Biblical apocalypse (revelation) Joseph and Pharaoh, Daniel, Revelation of St John.

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Presentation transcript:

DREAM VISION

Biblical apocalypse (revelation) Joseph and Pharaoh, Daniel, Revelation of St John

Biblical apocalypse: Revelation of St John

Macrobius, Commentary on the Dream of Scipio (c. 400)

Boethius, On the Consolation of Philosophy (c )

Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun, The Romance of the Rose ( and c )

Dante, The Divine Comedy ( )

Guillaume Machaut, Le Remede de Fortune (c. 1340); Jugement dou Roy de Behainge (before 1342); Jugement dou Roy de Navarre (1349); La Fonteinne Amoureuse (c. 1360) Jean Froissart, Paradys d’Amours (c )

Guillaume Machaut, Le Remede de Fortune (c. 1340); Jugement dou Roy de Behainge (before 1342); Jugement dou Roy de Navarre (1349); La Fonteinne Amoureuse (c. 1360) Jean Froissart, Paradys d’Amours (c ) William Langland, Piers Plowman (c. 1362, revisions c. 1377, c. 1390)

John Gower, Vox clamantis (Latin, c. 1385); Confessio amantis (c , revised 1393)

Sir John Clanvowe, The Book of Cupid (c. 1385)

John Gower, Vox clamantis (Latin, c. 1385); Confessio amantis (c , revised 1393) Sir John Clanvowe, The Book of Cupid (c. 1385) Geoffrey Chaucer, The Book of the Duchess (c. 1370); The Parliament of Fowls (c. 1382); The House of Fame (c ); The Legend of Good Women (c )

(May morning) prologue strange world narrator superior guide journey of (self-)discovery

AUTHORITY

writing

AUTHORITY And he said to me: Take the book, and eat it up: and it shall make thy belly bitter, but in thy mouth it shall be sweet as honey. Apocalypse 10.9

AUTHORITY writing (mis)reading

AUTHORITY writing guide and narrator

AUTHORITY writing guide and narrator dreaming (origins and authenticity)

INTERNAL somnium naturalephysical origins, bodily imbalance (food or humours) somnium animalemental origins (anxiety, fear, hope) EXTERNAL somnium coelestedivine or oracular origins

Fro spot my spyryt ther sprang in space; My body on balke ther bod in sweven. My goste is gon in Godes grace In aventure ther mervayles meven. Pearl, lines 61-64

Thagh kynde of Kryst me comfort kenned, My wreched wylle in wo ay wraghte. I felle upon that floury flaght, Suche odour to my hernes schot; I slode upon a slepyng-slaghte On that precios perle wythouten spot. Fro spot my spyryt ther sprang in space; My body on balke ther bod in sweven. My goste is gon in Godes grace In aventure ther mervayles meven. Pearl, lines 55-64

Can I not seyn if that the cause were For I hadde red of Affrican byforn That made me to mete that he stod there;.. Cytherea, thow blysful lady swete, That with thy fyrbrond dauntest whom the lest And madest me this sweven for to mete, Be thow myn helpe in this, for thow mayst best! As wisly as I sey the north-north-west, Whan I began my sweven for to write, So yif me myght to ryme, and endyte!

LEGAL PROCEDURE FOR THE BIRDS Judicial and legal language dom (judgement), audyence, statut, governaunce, ordenaunce, pletynge (pleading), parti, preve (prove/proof), verdit, conseyl, pleyn eleccioun, diffyne, termyne (determine)

LEGAL PROCEDURE FOR THE BIRDS Language of social status royal tersel, gentyl, tiraunt, lowere kynde “Kek kek! kokkow! quek! quek!” “Ye, have the glotoun fild inow his paunche, Thanne are we wel!” seyde the merlioun

‘So I,’ quod he, ‘may have my make in pes, I reche nat how longe that ye stryve. Lat ech of hem be soleyn al here lyve!’

The goos seyde, ‘Al this nys not worth a flye! But I can shape herof a remedie, And I wol seye my verdit fayre and swythe For water-foul, whoso be wroth or blythe!’ ‘And I for worm-foul,’ seyde the fol kokkow, ‘For I wol of myn owene autorite, For comune spede, take on the charge now, For to delyvere us is gret charite.’