Fleas, Flies, and Friars: Children's Poetry from the Middle Ages
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About this ebook
Medieval children lived in a world rich in poetry, from lullabies, nursery rhymes, and songs to riddles, tongue twisters, and nonsensical verses. They read or listened to stories in verse: ballads of Robin Hood, romances, and comic tales. Poems were composed to teach them how to behave, eat at meals, hunt game, and even learn Latin and French. In Fleas, Flies, and Friars, Nicholas Orme, an expert on childhood in the Middle Ages, has gathered a wide variety of children’s verse that circulated in England beginning in the 1400s, providing a way for modern readers of all ages to experience the medieval world through the eyes of its children.
In his delightful treasury of medieval children’s verse, Orme does a masterful job of recovering a lively and largely unknown tradition, preserving the playfulness of the originals while clearly explaining their meaning, significance, or context. Poems written in Latin or French have been translated into English, and Middle English has been modernized. Fleas, Flies, and Friars has five parts. The first two contain short lyrical pieces and fragments, together with excerpts from essays in verse that address childhood or were written for children. The third part presents poems for young people about behavior. The fourth contains three long stories and the fifth brings together verse relating to education and school life.
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Reviews for Fleas, Flies, and Friars
11 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is a collection of works from the middle ages. Nicolas Orme created a book that offers a peek into the lives of children during this time. Poems, rhymes, and verses by children, for children or about children.It’s not what I expected. While Nicolas Orme’s goal was to make these works accessible to the common reader as opposed to a scholar, I had thought I was picking up a book for children. The book is not for young children. Some of the language is rough and there’s a good deal of explanation about the works.That’s not to say that this wasn’t an interesting read. I enjoyed it quite well. It’s an interesting glimpse into the past. I enjoyed the history and the language of this book.I found it interesting to discover that papermaking began during this time period and that school books were often written in verse to make memorizing easier. The class would have limited books so the children would have to memorize parts of the books so they could be passed around. Two thoughts come to mind – 1. We think we have limited text books. and 2. Why don’t they do that now, imagine how much more the kids would remember.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Fleas, Flies, and Friars Children's Poety from the Middle Ages by Nicholas OrwePoetry for children during the middle ages including balladsof Robin Hood, charms, riddles, nursery rhymes and songs.Latin and religion play a big part in what was said in these poems.Interesting to see how and why these poems came about.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Pros: designed to be read by anyone (not just scholars), wide variety of examples, good introductionCons: little commentary on the different poems/examples, no conclusion, no easy way to see the original poems he translates Nicholas Orme has put together a short book of poetry that would have been told to or written/spoken by children in the Middle Ages. He's done so using full English translations so the book is accessible to those without a background in the field or a knowledge of Latin or middle English. The downside to this is that if you do know the languages there's no checking his translations to see what (if any) liberties he's taken to get the meaning across or to force the rhythm and rhymes of the poems. He did keep some old words, to help with the rhymes and maintain flavour, and here he helpfully added translations/modernisations at the bottom of the page.The book covers a wide variety of poems, from games to manners, stories, and grammar school exercises. This allows for a nice window into the lives of children, at work and at play, increasing our knowledge of how people lived. It shows that children were not thought of as 'little adults', that they were allowed to play and were catered to in many ways, according to their age and abilities.I would have liked more commentary on the individual pieces and a conclusion showing some of the things these poems show us about how children were treated in the middle ages. But again, Orme wanted this book to be less scholarly and more easily accessible and so kept commentary to a minimum.An interesting glimpse of an aspect of the middle ages that is not well understood.
Book preview
Fleas, Flies, and Friars - Nicholas Orme
CHILDREN’S POETRY FROM THE MIDDLE AGES
Ever since there was speech, there must have been verse, rhythmic or rhyming, and children who heard, sang, or spoke it. Two thousand years ago, Jesus pictured them calling to one another in the market place,
We piped to you, and you did not dance;
We mourned, and you did not cry.¹
But for a long time, the verse that children knew and spoke went unrecorded, except for rare allusions like that of Jesus. In classical times and for most of the Middle Ages, the majority of writings were concerned with other things: at least those writings that we now possess. Only very gradually did adults, and later children themselves, begin to note down the verses and songs of childhood, and little even of what they noted exists today.
The earliest surviving poetry for children in medieval Britain comes from the grammar schools: schools that taught Latin to boys and youths. From Roman times, pupils in these schools studied Latin literature in verse, one of the most popular texts being a collection of wise sayings from the third century AD, known as the Distichs of Cato. Such poetry was adult in origin, but may be called children’s literature since it was read by children. In about 1200, textbooks of grammar for schools (which had previously been written in Latin prose) began to be produced in Latin verse as well. It seems odd today to write a textbook in verse, but when copies of books were few, parts of such texts could be committed to memory as a substitute for a written version. For the rest of the Middle Ages, down to about the 1520s, verse textbooks were commonly used in grammar schools, and excerpts from two of them are included in this anthology.
Soon after 1200, the writing of textbooks in verse spread to other subjects than Latin grammar. Courtesy books appeared, meaning poems that taught good manners, chiefly aimed at boys of the higher classes of society. These poems gave advice on how to behave at the table or when speaking to other people, and were produced first in Latin and later also in English. In the 1240s, an English knight named Walter of Bibbesworth wrote a treatise in verse for children learning French, and in the fifteenth century some writers in English compiled works in poetic form to teach morality and wisdom to teenagers, including a Scottish gentleman named Rait. By that time, there was also a handbook in rhyme about hunting, ostensibly by a gentle-woman for her son but doubtless meant for any young men of the gentry.
Most of the verse of medieval children, however, existed only in speech. There were many short rhymes: nursery rhymes, tongue-twisters, riddles, charms, game rhymes, and insults, as well as adult songs that children heard and sang. Stories were told as ballads to gatherings of adults where children might be present: stories like the adventures of Robin Hood. Nearly all this oral verse has been lost and it took a long time for anyone to write down the words. One thirteenth-century Latin sermon refers to a children’s game rhyme in English, and another to an English song sung by a teenage girl about a search of a boy friend. But it is only after 1400 that more than a few scraps of such verse survive, and their survival reflects an important change in technology: the advent of paper.
Paper was cheaper than the parchment that had hitherto been available for writing permanent records, and more durable than the wax or wooden tablets used for jotting down temporary ones. In grammar schools in particular, paper enabled boys and youths to keep notes of their work, and several collections of their notes survive from the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Such collections need not have contained any children’s verse, but fifteenth-century schoolmasters did not forbid, and perhaps even encouraged, their pupils to write down bits of poetry from time to time as a challenge to translate it into Latin. They probably thought that this would keep their class amused during the grind of school lessons. As a result of this, school notebooks provide us with fragments of verse and a few longer pieces that children (or more accurately teenagers) invented themselves or recorded from what they were saying and hearing: precious survivals of the oral culture of the day.
The fifteenth century is also notable in producing narrative literature that children could enjoy. Previously, although children were probably often listeners while literature was read aloud by adults, such literature was primarily written for adults. After 1400, there is a stronger sense that stories were being composed or recycled in a way that was suitable for both adults and children, or even for children alone. The Robin Hood ballads come into this category, as do some romances, and there is a comic tale in verse called The Friar and the Boy which appears to have been chiefly aimed at children. By 1476, when William Caxton began to print books in England, children were sufficiently important as readers for his opening list of titles to include four short works in verse especially for them. All four were instructive in nature, notably an English translation of the well-known courtesy poem Stans Puer ad Mensam, but later on Caxton and his successors like Wynkyn de Worde also published stories suitable for young people.
The result of these developments is that a wide variety of poems and verses can be collected that were written up to about 1500 and have some connection with children. Some were composed or copied by young people themselves, others by adults for them to use. This poetry has not received much notice from scholars of literature in Britain, because it is scattered and fragmentary, and there are many larger and more ambitious works for adults that merit attention. In 1978, however, Professor Helen Cooper produced a notable pioneering anthology called Great Grandmother Goose, which brought together a modernised collection of scraps of English verse from the later Middle Ages. These scraps are roughly of the kind that we associate with the term ‘nursery rhymes’: tiny stories, short lyrics, bits of fantasy, and satirical or proverbial couplets.
This is an admirable collection for general readers to learn about medieval culture. A problem with it is that many of the pieces cannot be definitely linked to children. For example, Professor Cooper included three of the famous ‘Rawlinson lyrics’ written down on a single parchment leaf in the early fourteenth century. These lyrics, ‘Maiden in the moor lay’, ‘The Irish dancer’, and ‘Stand all still’, could equally well be adult songs aimed principally at adults. We have no knowledge of when they were sung or to whom. Children may have listened to them and enjoyed them, but we cannot be sure.
My own anthology of late medieval children’s literature has been drawn up on two different principles. First, it centres on verses that can be shown to have been composed, copied, used by, or aimed at children or teenagers, whether by adults or children themselves. There are some exceptions to this. Chaucer’s ‘Prioress’s Tale’ and John Trevisa’s reminiscences of his school days were not written expressly for children. Nor were the accounts of children’s games by Rait and Alexander Barclay. They have been included because they illustrate aspects of childhood that cannot easily be depicted from poems produced for children or by them. The vast majority of the items that I have collected, however, have