JOHN GOWER: THE MINOR LATIN WORKS: NOTES



ABBREVIATIONS: CA: Gower, Confessio Amantis; CB: Gower, Cinkante Ballades; Cronica: Gower, Cronica Tripertita; CT: Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales; CVP: Gower, Carmen super multiplici viciorum pestilencia; IPP: Gower, In Praise of Peace; Mac: Macaulay edition; MO: Gower, Mirour de l'Omme; TC: Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde; Thynne: William Thynne, printer, The Works of Geffray Chaucer (1532) [prints IPP from Tr]; Traitié: Gower, Traitié pour essampler les amantz marietz; VC: Gower, Vox Clamantis.

All biblical citations are to the Vulgate text, and, unless otherwise noted, all biblical translations are from the Douai-Rheims. For a list of manuscript abbreviations, please see Manuscripts in the Introduction.



14. DICUNT SCRIPTURE: NOTES


The marginal Latin glosses, identified by a capital L in the left margin next to the text, are transcribed and translated in the notes and can be accessed by clicking on the L at the corresponding line.

Dicunt scripture: Perhaps written in conjunction with his will, produced 15 August 1408 and proved 24 October of the same year. See Macaulay 4.xvii; the will is reproduced in translation on 4.xvii-xviii. The form is Leonine elegiac distichs, each line with a separate monosyllabic rhyme.

The text here is from C, read against H, G, and E.

1 ff. Latin marginalia in C: Nota contra mortuorum executors. ["Note against the executors of death."]

1 novissima vite. Undoubtedly intended are the "Four Last Things," i.e., death, judgment, hell, and heaven, which are not scriptural (although thought to be adapted from Paul: compare Hebrews 6:2, 9:27) but traditional or proverbial. See CVP, Marginalia to lines 302 ff.

6 sis memor ergo tue. Perhaps reflecting the care Gower took to create his own monument -- the tomb with its lifelike effigy at St. Mary Overys, its head resting on his three major books; the carefully spelled-out will; provision included there for daily masses for his soul, and an obit sung annually (according to Berthelette, in the preface to his 1532 edition of the Confessio Amantis, quoted in Mac 4.420) "on fryday after the feaste of the blessed pope saynte Gregory." Apparently Gower provided for a monument of some sort for Agnes as well, but nothing of it now remains, nor is a physical description known (although John Bale records an epitaph, presumably attached; see Mac 4.lix, and Hines, Cohen, and Roffey, "Johannes Gower, Armiger, Poeta," p. 27).