The early Middle English period > Poetry > Influence of French poetry
By the end of the 12th century, English poetry had been so heavily influenced by French models that such a work as the long epic Brut (c. 1200) by Lawamon, a Worcestershire priest, seems archaic for mixing alliterative lines with rhyming couplets while generally eschewing French vocabulary. The Brut draws mainly upon Wace's Anglo-Norman Roman de Brut (1155; based in turn upon Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia regum Britanniae [History of the Kings of Britain]), but in Lawamon's hands the Arthurian story takes on a Germanic and heroic flavour largely missing in Wace. The Brut exists in two manuscripts, one written shortly after 1200 and the other some 50 years later. That the later version has been extensively modernized and somewhat abridged suggests the speed with which English language and literary tastes were changing in this period. The Proverbs of Alfred was written somewhat earlier, in the late 12th century; these proverbs deliver conventional wisdom in a mixture of rhymed couplets and alliterative lines, and it is hardly likely that any of the material they contain actually originated with the king whose wisdom they celebrate. The early 13th-century Bestiary mixes alliterative lines, three- and four-stress couplets, and septenary (heptameter) lines, but the logic behind this mix is more obvious than in the Brut and the Proverbs, for the poet was imitating the varied metres of his Latin source. More regular in form than these poems is the anonymous Poema morale in septenary couplets, in which an old man delivers a dose of moral advice to his presumably younger audience.
By far the most brilliant poem of this period is The Owl and the Nightingale (written after 1189), an example of the popular debate genre. The two birds argue topics ranging from their hygienic habits, looks, and songs to marriage, prognostication, and the proper modes of worship. The nightingale stands for the joyous aspects of life, the owl for the sombre; there is no clear winner, but the debate ends as the birds go off to state their cases to one Nicholas of Guildford, a wise man. The poem is learned in the clerical tradition but wears its learning lightly as the disputants speak in colloquial and sometimes earthy language. Like the Poema morale, The Owl and the Nightingale is metrically regular (octosyllabic couplets), but it uses the French metre with an assurance unusual in so early a poem.
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·Introduction
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·The Old English period
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·The early Middle English period
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·The later Middle English and early Renaissance periods
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·Later Middle English poetry
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·The revival of alliterative poetry
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·Courtly poetry
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·Chaucer and Gower
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·Poetry after Chaucer and Gower
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·Later Middle English prose
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·Middle English drama
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·The transition from medieval to Renaissance
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·The Renaissance period: 15501660
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·Literature and the age
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·Elizabethan poetry and prose
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·Elizabethan and early Stuart drama
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·Early Stuart poetry and prose
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·The Restoration
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·The 18th century
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·Publication of political literature
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·Journalism
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·Major political writers
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·The novel
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·The major novelists
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·Defoe
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·Richardson
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·Fielding
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·Smollett
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·Sterne
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·Other novelists
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·Poets and poetry after Pope
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·The Romantic period
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·The post-Romantic and Victorian eras
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·The 20th century
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·From 1900 to 1945
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·Literature after 1945
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·The 21st century
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·Additional Reading
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·General works
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·The Old English period
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·The Middle English period
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·The Renaissance period, 15501660
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·The Restoration and the 18th century
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·The Romantic period
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·The Post-Romantic and Victorian eras
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·The 20th century
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