Aucassin and Nicolete by Unknown
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page 1 of 59 (01%)
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AUCASSIN AND NICOLETE
Dedicated to the Hon. James Russell Lowell. INTRODUCTION There is nothing in artistic poetry quite akin to "Aucassin and Nicolete." By a rare piece of good fortune the one manuscript of the Song-Story has escaped those waves of time, which have wrecked the bark of Menander, and left of Sappho but a few floating fragments. The very form of the tale is peculiar; we have nothing else from the twelfth or thirteenth century in the alternate prose and verse of the _cante-fable_. {1} We have fabliaux in verse, and prose Arthurian romances. We have _Chansons de Geste_, heroic poems like "Roland," unrhymed assonant _laisses_, but we have not the alternations of prose with _laisses_ in seven-syllabled lines. It cannot be certainly known whether the form of "Aucassin and Nicolete" was a familiar form--used by many _jogleors_, or wandering minstrels and story-tellers such as Nicolete, in the tale, feigned herself to be,--or whether this is a solitary experiment by "the old captive" its author, a contemporary, as M. Gaston Paris thinks him, of Louis VII (1130). He was original enough to have invented, or adopted from popular tradition, a form for himself; his originality declares itself everywhere in his one surviving masterpiece. True, he uses |
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