
Rare and modern books
[Early Printing In English], Gower
De Confessione Amantis [Edited by Thomas Berthelet]
Thomas Berthelet, 1554
19800.00 €
Buddenbrooks Inc.
(Newburyport, United States of America)
The correct shipping costs are calculated once the shipping address is entered during order creation. One or more delivery methods are available at the Seller's own discretion: Standard, Express, Economy, In-store pick-up.
Bookshop shipping conditions:
For items priced over €300, it is possible to request an instalment plan from Maremagnum. Payment can be made with Carta del Docente, Carta della cultura giovani e del merito, Public Administration.
Delivery time is estimated according to the shipping time of the bookshop and the courier. In case of customs detention, delivery delays may occur. Any customs duties are charged to the recipient.
For more infoPayment methods
- PayPal
- Credit card
- Bank transfer
-
-
Find out how to use
your Carta del Docente -
Find out how to use
your Carta della cultura giovani e del merito
Details
Description
Edizione: very rare early printing of this important english work. johnson wrote in his dictionary: "he that reads the works of gower will find smooth numbers and easy rhymes, of which chaucer is supposed to have been the inventor, and the french words, whether good or bad, of which chaucer is charged as the inventor." <br> the confessio amantis is a poem which uses the confessions made by an aging lover to the chaplain of venus as a frame story for a collection of shorter narrative poems. according to its prologue, it was composed at the request of richard ii. it stands with the works of chaucer and langland as the great works of 14th century english literature. for sources gower relied largely on ovid, but others include the bible and various other classical writers. these were sources shared by gower's with his close friend, geoffrey chaucer. confessio has two stories also told in the canterbury tales, the tale of florent, also told by the wife of bath, and the tale of constance, which in chaucer is the man of lawes tale. another one of gower's narratives, 'apollonius of tyre' served as a source for william shakespeare. shakespeare drew from it the plot for his 'pericles', and introduces gower himself as chorus, who opens each act with a prologue. <br> this edition is essentially a reprint of the second edition of 1532, with some corrections and with the text of the preliminary leaves a bit compressed. this copy with exceptional provenance, iltyd nicholl (stamp on flyleaf and bookplate) -- digby nicholl (stamp on flyleaf) -- william marchbank (armorial bookplate) -- e.m. cox (bookplate and initials pencilled on rear flyleaf, 1904) and abel berland, with his famous bookplate.