Difference between revisions of "I have a gentil cok"

From Animal Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (formatting)
m (Added reference)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Lyric from MS. London BL Sloane 2593  
+
Lyric from MS. London BL Sloane 2593; taken from ''Medieval English Lyrics 1200-1400'', ed. Thomas G. Duncan (Harmonsdworth: Penguin Books, 1995), 168-169.
 +
 
 +
==Text==
  
 
I have a gentil cok,  
 
I have a gentil cok,  
Line 45: Line 47:
 
:in myn ladies chaumber.  
 
:in myn ladies chaumber.  
  
''Medieval English Lyrics 1200-1400'', ed. Thomas G. Duncan (Harmonsdworth: Penguin Books, 1995), 168-169.
+
==Criticism==
 +
Baird-Lange, Lorrayne Y. 'Symbolic Ambivalence in "I haue a gentil cock', ''Fifteenth-Century Studies'' 11 (1985): 1-5

Latest revision as of 16:26, 23 May 2012

Lyric from MS. London BL Sloane 2593; taken from Medieval English Lyrics 1200-1400, ed. Thomas G. Duncan (Harmonsdworth: Penguin Books, 1995), 168-169.

Text

I have a gentil cok,

crowëth me the day;

He doth me risen erly,

my matins for to say.


I have a gentil cok,

comen he is of gret;

His comb is of red corel,

his tayil is of jet.


I have a gentil cok,

comen he is of kinde;

His comb is red corel,

his tayil is of inde.


His leggës ben of asur,

so gentil and so smale;

His spurës arn of sylver white

into the wortëwale.


His eyen arn of cristal,

loken al in aumber;

And every night he perchëth him

in myn ladies chaumber.

Criticism

Baird-Lange, Lorrayne Y. 'Symbolic Ambivalence in "I haue a gentil cock', Fifteenth-Century Studies 11 (1985): 1-5