Guillaume de Lorris

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Guillaume de Lorris

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Guillaume de Lorris , c.1215-c.1278, French poet, author of the first part of the Roman de la Rose . He handled the chivalric conventions with subtlety and charm, and his work shows taste, psychological perception, and wide familiarity with French letters.

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Guillaume de Lorris

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Guillaume de Lorris

The French poet Guillaume de Lorris (ca. 1210-ca. 1237) was the author of the first part of the "Romance of the Rose, " the most popular work in medieval French literature.

The only place in the Romance of the Rose in which the name of Guillaume de Lorris appears is in the continuation of Jean de Meun, which indicates that Guillaume died some 40 years earlier. Since Guillaume refers to a dream in his twentieth year 5 or 6 years earlier, the date of his birth can be assumed to be about 1210. He was probably born in Lorris, a small town some 30 miles east of Orléans. Just as death prevented Chrestien de Troyes from completing the Perceval, so Guillaume died before he finished the Romance of the Rose; he stops at line 4, 058 (4, 028 in Lecoy's edition). Nothing more is known of Guillaume.

The age of the Arthurian romance, with its pageantry, adventures, and thrills, was passing. Hence Guillaume turned to the moral and psychological aspects, represented symbolically in an elaborate allegory. He is not interested in the plot but rather in an exquisitely delicate analysis of young love. Indeed, he says that his poem sets forth the art of love.

In a dream the author sees himself wandering. He comes upon an idyllic formal garden enclosed in a wall bearing hideous paintings of Hatred, Wickedness, Baseness, Covetousness, Avarice, Envy, Sadness, Old Age, Hypocrisy, and Poverty. Gracious Idleness bids the dreamer enter the garden of Amusement, where he meets fair company. The dreamer, henceforth called the lover, is captivated by a rose and immediately the god of Love pierces him with five arrows and instructs the lover in the 10 commandments of love, a veritable abstract of the courtly love code. His quest to pick the rose is long, helped by such as Hope and especially by Fair Welcome but frustrated by Danger, Slander, Shame, Fear, and Jealousy. After the lover succeeds in kissing the rose, Jealousy has the rose shut up in a donjon along with Fair Welcome, and the lover laments his lot as Guillaume's poem ends.

Guillaume's themes were not new; Ovid, Chrestien de Troyes, the troubadours, and Andreas Capellanus furnished him with much, but the freshness of Guillaume's imagination and the delicacy and elegance of his treatment made the work persistently successful, to which the preservation of some 300 manuscripts attests. The influence is manifest in Geoffrey Chaucer's translation, Clément Marot's edition, and Madeleine de Scudéry's Map of Love, and echoes continue to appear down to the works of Marcel Proust and Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.

Further Reading

The best monographs on Guillaume de Lorris are in French. In English, Clive S. Lewis, The Allegory of Love:A Study in Medieval Tradition (1936), and Charles Muscatine, Chaucer and the French Tradition:A Study in Style and Meaning (1957), are useful.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

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Magazine article from: Poetry; 6/1/2002

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, and more

Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun: Narcissus and Pygmalion.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 11/1/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...Near the beginning of the poem Guillaume de Lorris recounts Ovid's story of...order to make him more like Guillaume de Lorris' Narcissus. When Amant enters...Narcissus that is operative in Guillaume de Lorris's text at this point is collapsed...
An allegorical mirror: the pool of Narcissus in Guillaume de Lorris' Romance of the Rose.
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 11/1/2000; ; 700+ words ; ...optical nerve and brain: Hunain's description of the eye's structure provides an important detail for our understanding of Guillaume's fountain, for it indicates that the crystals beneath the water, with their ability to receive color from the sun's...
Pseudo-autobiography in the Fourteenth Century: Juan Ruiz Guillaume de Machaut, Jean Froissart and Geoffrey Chaucer.(Review)
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 3/22/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...narrator of Le Roman de la Rose, when `Guillaume de Lorris' is specifically, and wrongly, named...cited is that following the end of the `Guillaume de Lorris' section and the naming of Guillaume and Jean de Meun as authors by Amor in...
Ardis Butterfield. Poetry and Music in Medieval France from Jean Renart to Guillaume Machaut.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 1/1/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...Renart's Roman de la Rose ou de Guillaume de Dole from the early decades...focus on the Roman de la Rose of Guillaume de Lorris revised by Jean de Meun. Moreover...between Adam de la Halle and Guillaume de Machaut occur within a narrative...
Reading the 'Rose:' literacy and the presentation of the 'Roman de la Rose' in medieval manuscripts.
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 1/1/1994; ; 700+ words ; ...the death of the first author, Guillaume de Lorris. Jean de Meun, speaking through...quotation of the last six verses of Guillaume's poem (vv. 10525-10530...10565-10566). Jean and Guillaume are also made to take their place...
Akbari, Suzanne Conklin, Seeing Through the Veil: Optical Theory and Medieval Allegory.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Parergon; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...of four medieval authors. In Guillaume de Lorris's Roman de la rose, Akbari...structure is compelling evidence that Guillaume's Roman de la rose is complete...contrast, Jean de Meun subsumes Guillaume's poem to his own ends, by...
Internal Differences and Meanings in the Roman de la Rose.(Review)
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 9/22/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...grounds. Kelly sees Jean's Rose as a recasting of Guillaume de Lorris's dream through the refracting mirrors of Ovid and Boethius, thereby undercutting Guillaume's courtly idealism. The result can be seen as a...
Five Interpolated Romances from the Lancelot Compilation
Magazine article from: Arthuriana; 10/1/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...so rightly deserves, in the center of the field where the scholarly debate takes place. But, in spite of what Guillaume de Lorris says about them, we know 'qu'en songes/ n'a se fables non et menonges,' and the Middle Dutch texts have...
Rethinking the 'Romance of the Rose': Text, Image, Reception.
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 3/22/1994; ; 700+ words ; ...treating mediaeval and modern readings of the Roman de la Rose, divided among five sections: literary approaches to Guillaume de Lorris's Roman (I) and Jean de Meung's continuation (II), the iconographic tradition of the whole poem (III and...
La Cort d' Amor: A Critical Edition.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 3/22/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...correct, then this poem is the earliest surviving vernacular narrative personification allegory, easily predating Guillaume de Lorris's Roman de la Rose. Bardell's edition is the first reliable and complete one of the poem, following the less...

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