- Pastourelle
The pastourelle is a typically
Old French lyric form concerning the romance of a shepherdess. In most of the early pastourelles, the poet knight meets a shepherdess who bests him in a wit battle and who displays general coyness. The narrator usually has sexual relations, either consensual orrape , with the shepherdess, and there is a departure or escape. Later developments moved towardpastoral poetry by having a shepherd and sometimes a love quarrel. The form originated with thetroubadour poets of the 12th century and particularly with the poetMarcabru .This troubadour form melded with
goliard poetry and was practiced inFrance andOccitan until the "Carmina Burana " of "c." 1230. InSpanish literature , the pastourelle influenced the "serranilla ", and fifteenth century pastourelles exist in French, German, English, and Welsh. One short Scots example is "Robene and Makyne ".Adam de la Halle 's "Jeu de Robin et Marion" (the game of Robin and Maid Marion) is a dramatization of a pastourelle, and as late asEdmund Spenser the pastourelle is referred to in book six of "Faerie Queene ". Child's ballads gives an example in "The Baffled Knight ".References
*Paden, William D. "Pastourelle" in Alex Preminger and T. V. F. Brogan, eds., "The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics." Princeton: Princeton UP, 1993. p. 888.
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