Description
Book SynopsisThe Benedictine monk John Lydgate was the most admired poet of the fifteenth century. He received commissions from some of the most powerful men in the land (including Henry V); he is spoken of with constant admiration; manuscripts of his work are abundant; many of his poems were put into print by England''s earliest printers, ensuring that his influence extended well into the sixteenth century. The Fall of Princes, probably the longest poem in the language, is arguably Lydgate''s masterwork; yet, until now, it has received only cursory critical attention. This book offers the first extended discussion of the poem.The Fall of Princes accumulates accounts of nearly 500 figures from mythology and history (biblical, classical, and medieval) who have fallen from their positions of fame and power into obscurity, adversity, or poverty. In presenting these tragedies Lydgate probes the causes of the reversal of their fortunes; how far can the caprice of a blind Lady Fortune be blamed? How far
Trade Review...astute close readings... Mortimer's monograph will be welcomed by the "new and open-minded audience" it addresses and will, I am sure, futher the Lydgate renaissance that is under way. * Karen A. Winstead, Speculum *
a study that will be inestimably valuable...From start to finish, Mortimer's book is useful to the reader; it sets out not only to advance theses about the poem but also to enable and encourage future work. Such scholarly generosity makes this book essential reading for medievalists and Renaissance critics alike.
Mortimer's evidence-led approach is impressive and convincing... * Medium AEvum *
Mortimer's work represents a tremendous contribution to fifteenth-century studies. His careful scholarship and his treatment of such a wide variety of themes render his book essential reading for new and established Lydgate scholars alike, but it is above all his open and charitable attitude toward his subject - so unusual in much of Lydgate scholarship - which brings the monk and his text to life for the reader. For all those wishing to familiarize themselves with the origins, contexts, and influences of Lydgate's Fall of Princes, Mortimer's study is the place to start. * Mary Flannery, Notes and Queries *
Related concerns are at the heart of Nigel Mortimer's study of The Fall of Princes (completed 1439), which examines how Lydgate blended "regiminal" literature (advice to rulers) with an ambiguous and ambivalent regard to spiritual and secular authorities. Mortimer's Lydgate is a slippery entity, adept at playing many changing political roles through his poetry. * Anthony Bale, Modern Philology *
The array of information Mortimer brings together in this volume, as well as its thoroughgoing dependability, makes it an indispensible resource for all future scholarship on the poem...the volume's rigorous scholarship and extensive research findings make it an essential resource. * Journal of English and Germanic Philology *
Table of Contents1. The Fortunes of John Lydgate ; 2. The French Context of the Fall of Princes ; 3. 'Lancastrian' Lydgate: Poet and Patron ; 4. Spiritual and Secular Authority in the Fall ; 5. 'When the Good Bleeds': Tragedy in the Fall of Princes ; 6. The Reception and Influence of the Fall