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"'''I that in Heill wes and Gladnes'''", also known as "'''The Lament for the Makaris'''", is a poem in the form of a [[danse macabre]] by the Scottish poet [[William Dunbar]]. Every fourth line repeats the [[Latin]] refrain ''[[timor mortis conturbat me]]'' (fear of death troubles me), a [[litany|litanic]] phrase from the [[Office of the Dead]].
"'''I that in Heill wes and Gladnes'''", also known as "'''The Lament for the Makaris'''", is a poem in the form of a [[danse macabre]] by the Scottish poet [[William Dunbar]]. Every fourth line repeats the [[Latin]] refrain ''[[timor mortis conturbat me]]'' (fear of death troubles me), a [[litany|litanic]] phrase from the [[Office of the Dead]].


Apart from its literary quality, the poem is notable for the list of [[makars]] it contains, some of whom are historically attestable as poets only from Dunbar's testimony in this work. After listing [[John Lydgate|Lydgate]], [[John Gower|Gower]] and [[Chaucer]], the makars invoked are Scottish. All but two are cited as having died by the time of the composition. The two exceptions are the [[courtier]] Patrick Johnston and known poet [[Walter Kennedy (poet)|Walter Kennedy]], the latter of whom died ''circa'' 1508. From internal evidence, the [[lament]] is generally thought to have been composed c.1505.
Apart from its literary quality, the poem is notable for the list of [[makars]] it contains, some of whom are historically attestable as poets only from Dunbar's testimony in this work. After listing [[John Lydgate|Lydgate]], [[John Gower|Gower]] and [[Chaucer]], the makars invoked are Scottish. All but two are cited as having died by the time of the composition. The two exceptions are the [[courtier]] Patrick Johnston and known poet [[Walter Kennedy (poet)|Walter Kennedy]], the latter of whom died {{Circa|1508}}. From internal evidence, the [[lament]] is generally thought to have been composed c. 1505.


Most of the names can be traced to either the fourteenth or fifteenth centuries.
Most of the names can be traced to either the fourteenth or fifteenth centuries.
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==List of names in the Lament==
==List of names in the Lament==


The [[Wiktionary:list of names]] in the '''Lament for the Makaris''', all of which are from what Dunbar in the poem calls his "[[Faculty (division)|facultie]]", suggests a picture of the Scottish literary culture of the period which is wider than that otherwise handed down to us from the surviving record. In order and form of citation, the makars that Dunbar mourns in 'The Lament' are:
The list of names in the '''Lament for the Makaris''', all of which are from what Dunbar in the poem calls his "[[Faculty (division)|facultie]]", suggests a picture of the Scottish literary culture of the period which is wider than that otherwise handed down to us from the surviving record. In order and form of citation, the makars that Dunbar mourns in 'The Lament' are:


* '''[[Geoffrey Chaucer|Chaucer]]''' (died 1400)
* '''[[Geoffrey Chaucer|Chaucer]]''' (died 1400)
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* '''Barbour''' — [[John Barbour (poet)|John Barbour]] (died 1395), author of ''[[The Brus]]''
* '''Barbour''' — [[John Barbour (poet)|John Barbour]] (died 1395), author of ''[[The Brus]]''
* '''[[Lockharts of Lee|Schir Mungo Lokert of the Le]]''' — no known works; posited identification with historical knight (died 1489)<ref>Priscilla Bawcutt</ref>
* '''[[Lockharts of Lee|Schir Mungo Lokert of the Le]]''' — no known works; posited identification with historical knight (died 1489)<ref>Priscilla Bawcutt</ref>
* '''Clerk of [[Tranent]]''' — not identified; described by Dunbar as the author of a (lost?) ''[[Adventure (genre)|Anteris]] of [[Gawain|Gawane]]'', a title also attributed to [[Huchoun]] by [[Andrew of Wyntoun]]<ref>Dictionar of the Scots Leid: http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/aunter_n</ref>
* '''Clerk of [[Tranent]]''' — not identified; described by Dunbar as the author of a (lost?) ''[[Adventure (genre)|Anteris]] of [[Gawain|Gawane]]'', a title also attributed to [[Huchoun]] by [[Andrew of Wyntoun]]<ref>Dictionar of the Scots Leid: http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/aunter_n {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170816235151/http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/aunter_n |date=16 August 2017 }}</ref>
* '''Schir [[Gilbert Hay (poet)|Gilbert Hay]]''' (died after 1456) — author of the ''[[Buik of King Alexander the Conquerour]]'', a copy of which is dated 1499
* '''Schir [[Gilbert Hay (poet)|Gilbert Hay]]''' (died after 1456) — author of the ''[[Buik of King Alexander the Conquerour]]'', a copy of which is dated 1499
* '''[[Blind Hary]]''' (died 1492) — author of ''[[The Wallace (poem)|The Wallace]]''
* '''[[Blind Hary]]''' (died 1492) — author of ''[[The Wallace (poem)|The Wallace]]''
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* '''Roull of [[Aberdeen|Aberdene]]'''
* '''Roull of [[Aberdeen|Aberdene]]'''
* '''Roull of [[Corstorphine|Corstorphin]]''' — one surviving poem accredited to a Roull,<ref>[http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poem/769.html Lament for the Makaris] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090406023759/http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poem/769.html |date=2009-04-06 }} See notes section.</ref> (Roull = Scots form of the French name, Rolf)
* '''Roull of [[Corstorphine|Corstorphin]]''' — one surviving poem accredited to a Roull,<ref>[http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poem/769.html Lament for the Makaris] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090406023759/http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poem/769.html |date=2009-04-06 }} See notes section.</ref> (Roull = Scots form of the French name, Rolf)
* '''[[Robert Henryson|Maister Robert Henrisoun]]''' (d. c.1500) — one of Scotland's most important poets; works include the ''[[Testament of Cresseid]]'' and ''[[Morall Fabillis]]''
* '''[[Robert Henryson|Maister Robert Henrisoun]]''' (d. c. 1500) — one of Scotland's most important poets; works include the ''[[Testament of Cresseid]]'' and ''[[Morall Fabillis]]''
* '''Schir Johne the [[Ross, Scotland|Ros]]''' — no known works; he was Dunbar's ''commissar'' in the ''[[Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedy]]''
* '''Schir Johne the [[Ross, Scotland|Ros]]''' — no known works; he was Dunbar's ''commissar'' in the ''[[Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedy]]''
* '''[[Stobo (makar)|Stobo]]''' — no known works; he is identified with John Reid, priest in [[Kirkcudbright]],<ref name=findebetterrefs/> who served as clerk and notary in royal courts of [[James II of Scotland|James II]], [[James III of Scotland|III]] and [[James IV of Scotland|IV]]
* '''[[Stobo (makar)|Stobo]]''' — no known works; he is identified with John Reid, priest in [[Kirkcudbright]],<ref name=findebetterrefs/> who served as clerk and notary in royal courts of [[James II of Scotland|James II]], [[James III of Scotland|III]] and [[James IV of Scotland|IV]]
* '''Quintyne [[Shaw (surname)|Schaw]]''' — Kennedy's ''commissar'' in the ''Flyting''; one satire extant (see also [[Clan Shaw of Tordarroch]])
* '''Quintyne [[Shaw (surname)|Schaw]]''' — Kennedy's ''commissar'' in the ''Flyting''; one satire extant (see also [[Clan Shaw of Tordarroch]])
* '''Gud maister [[Walter Kennedy (poet)|Walter Kennedy]]''' (d. c.1508) — surviving works by Kennedy include ''[[The Passioun of Crist]]'' and his part in the ''Flyting''
* '''Gud maister [[Walter Kennedy (poet)|Walter Kennedy]]''' (d. c. 1508) — surviving works by Kennedy include ''[[The Passioun of Crist]]'' and his part in the ''Flyting''


Dunbar offers some small tantalising details beyond customary compliments for the lost poets cited. The title of one poem is given: Clerk of Tranent's "Anteris of Gawane", an otherwise unknown work. Of Mercer, Dunbar extends his critical opinion to say that he "did [[love|in luf]] so lifly write,/ So schort, so quyk, of sentence [[Wiktionary:high|hie]]", and the reference to him as a poet of love also accords with the fact that some love poems are attributed to a "Mersar" in the [[George Bannatyne|Bannatyne MS]]. Finally, if the lines "That scorpion [[Wiktionary:terrible|fell]] hes done infek,/ Maister Johne Clerk, and James Afflek,/ Fra [[ballad|balat]] making and [[tragedy|tragidie]]" can be taken to impart literal information, then it might infer that some particular reputation for work with more serious themes attached to these names. At that time in Scotland "tragedy" denoted any "story, play or poem with a disastrous or sorrowful outcome".<ref>Dictionary of the Scots Language, http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/tragedie</ref>
Dunbar offers some small tantalising details beyond customary compliments for the lost poets cited. The title of one poem is given: Clerk of Tranent's "Anteris of Gawane", an otherwise unknown work. Of Mercer, Dunbar extends his critical opinion to say that he "did [[love|in luf]] so lifly write,/ So schort, so quyk, of sentence [[Wiktionary:high|hie]]", and the reference to him as a poet of love also accords with the fact that some love poems are attributed to a "Mersar" in the [[George Bannatyne|Bannatyne MS]]. Finally, if the lines "That scorpion [[Wiktionary:terrible|fell]] hes done infek,/ Maister Johne Clerk, and James Afflek,/ Fra [[ballad|balat]] making and [[tragedy|tragidie]]" can be taken to impart literal information, then it might infer that some particular reputation for work with more serious themes attached to these names. At that time in Scotland "tragedy" denoted any "story, play or poem with a disastrous or sorrowful outcome".<ref>Dictionary of the Scots Language, http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/tragedie {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170816233905/http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/tragedie |date=16 August 2017 }}</ref>


==Extract==
==Extract==
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Anarmit under helme and scheild;
Anarmit under helme and scheild;
Victour he is at all [[Battle|mellie]];
Victour he is at all [[Battle|mellie]];
''Timor mortis conturbat me.''<ref>{{Cite web | title = RPO -- William Dunbar : Lament For The Makers | accessdate = 2014-01-27 | url = http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poems/lament-makers }}</ref><br /></poem></blockquote>
''Timor mortis conturbat me.''<ref>{{Cite web | title = RPO -- William Dunbar : Lament For The Makers | accessdate = 2014-01-27 | url = http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poems/lament-makers | archive-date = 3 July 2013 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130703221100/http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poems/lament-makers | url-status = live }}</ref><br /></poem></blockquote>
(''Lament for the Makaris'', Lines 17-24)
(''Lament for the Makaris'', Lines 17-24)


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==External links==
==External links==
* {{wikisource-inline|The Poems of William Dunbar/Volume 1/Lament for the Makaris|Lament for the Makaris|single=true}}
{{Wikisource|The Poems of William Dunbar/Volume 1/Lament for the Makaris|Lament for the Makaris}}
* [https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44205/lament-for-the-makers-56d22335db2cd Poetry Foundation online text for ''Lament for the Makars'' (re-cast in the title as 'Makers')]
* [https://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/content/lament-makers-0 Full text of the poem (original spelling)]
* [https://archive.org/details/earlyenglishscot00fitz/page/123 Full text of the poem (modernised spelling)]


{{Scots makars}}
{{Scots makars}}

Latest revision as of 03:54, 16 November 2024

Breughel, The Triumph of Death (detail)

"I that in Heill wes and Gladnes", also known as "The Lament for the Makaris", is a poem in the form of a danse macabre by the Scottish poet William Dunbar. Every fourth line repeats the Latin refrain timor mortis conturbat me (fear of death troubles me), a litanic phrase from the Office of the Dead.

Apart from its literary quality, the poem is notable for the list of makars it contains, some of whom are historically attestable as poets only from Dunbar's testimony in this work. After listing Lydgate, Gower and Chaucer, the makars invoked are Scottish. All but two are cited as having died by the time of the composition. The two exceptions are the courtier Patrick Johnston and known poet Walter Kennedy, the latter of whom died c. 1508. From internal evidence, the lament is generally thought to have been composed c. 1505.

Most of the names can be traced to either the fourteenth or fifteenth centuries.

List of names in the Lament

[edit]

The list of names in the Lament for the Makaris, all of which are from what Dunbar in the poem calls his "facultie", suggests a picture of the Scottish literary culture of the period which is wider than that otherwise handed down to us from the surviving record. In order and form of citation, the makars that Dunbar mourns in 'The Lament' are:

Dunbar offers some small tantalising details beyond customary compliments for the lost poets cited. The title of one poem is given: Clerk of Tranent's "Anteris of Gawane", an otherwise unknown work. Of Mercer, Dunbar extends his critical opinion to say that he "did in luf so lifly write,/ So schort, so quyk, of sentence hie", and the reference to him as a poet of love also accords with the fact that some love poems are attributed to a "Mersar" in the Bannatyne MS. Finally, if the lines "That scorpion fell hes done infek,/ Maister Johne Clerk, and James Afflek,/ Fra balat making and tragidie" can be taken to impart literal information, then it might infer that some particular reputation for work with more serious themes attached to these names. At that time in Scotland "tragedy" denoted any "story, play or poem with a disastrous or sorrowful outcome".[5]

Extract

[edit]

On to the ded gois all estatis,
Princis, prelotis, and potestatis,
Baith riche and pur of al degre;
   Timor mortis conturbat me.

He takis the knychtis in to feild,
Anarmit under helme and scheild;
Victour he is at all mellie;
   Timor mortis conturbat me.[6]

(Lament for the Makaris, Lines 17-24)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Tasioulas, J.A. The Makars Canongate 1999, p.788-9.
  2. ^ Priscilla Bawcutt
  3. ^ Dictionar of the Scots Leid: http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/aunter_n Archived 16 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Lament for the Makaris Archived 2009-04-06 at the Wayback Machine See notes section.
  5. ^ Dictionary of the Scots Language, http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/tragedie Archived 16 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "RPO -- William Dunbar : Lament For The Makers". Archived from the original on 3 July 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
[edit]