| Dimensions | 11 × 17 × 1 cm |
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| Language |
Paperback. Cream binding with black title on the spine. Red title and hangings image on the front board.
We provide an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available
An excellent paperback. Please view the photographs. A good clean book which though aged remains an excellent read.
Besides Le Lais and Le grand testament, Villon’s surviving works include multiple poems. Sixteen of these shorter poems vary from the serious to the light-hearted. An additional eleven poems in thieves’ jargon were attributed to Villon from a very early time, but many scholars now believe them to be the work of other poets imitating Villon.
Villon was a great innovator in terms of the themes of poetry and, through these themes, a great renovator of the forms. He understood perfectly the medieval courtly ideal, but he often chose to write against the grain, reversing the values and celebrating the lowlifes destined for the gallows, falling happily into parody or lewd jokes, and constantly innovating in his diction and vocabulary; a few minor poems make extensive use of Parisian thieves’ slang. Still Villon’s verse is mostly about his own life, a record of poverty, trouble, and trial which was certainly shared by his poems’ intended audience.
Villon’s poems are sprinkled with mysteries and hidden jokes. They are peppered with the slang of the time and the underworld subculture in which Villon moved. His works are also replete with private jokes and full of the names of real people – rich men, royal officials, lawyers, prostitutes, and policemen – from medieval Paris.
Villon’s poems enjoyed substantial popularity in the decades after they were written. In 1489, a printed volume of his poems was published by Pierre Levet. This edition was almost immediately followed by several others. In 1533, poet and humanist scholar Clément Marot published an important edition, in which he recognized Villon as one of the most significant poets in French literature, and sought to correct mistakes that had been introduced to the poetry by earlier and less careful printers.
François Villon (Middle French: c. 1431 – after 1463) is the best known French poet of the Late Middle Ages. He was involved in criminal behavior and had multiple encounters with law enforcement authorities. Villon wrote about some of these experiences in his poems.

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