The House of Fame
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The House of Fame is a poem by Geoffrey Chaucer, it is one of his early works, probably written between 1379 and 1380.
It is over 2,000 lines long in three books and takes the form of a dream vision composed in octosyllabic couplets. Geffrey upon falling asleep finds himself in a glass temple with images of the famous and their deeds. With an eagle as a guide, he meditates on the nature of fame and the trustworthiness of recorded renown. This allows Geffrey to contemplate the role of the poet in reporting the lives of the famous and how much truth there is in what can be told.
The poem is regarded as the first of Chaucer's Italian-influenced period and there are echoes of the works of Ovid, Virgil's Aeneid and particularly Dante's Divine Comedy. The three part structure and the name-dropping of various personalities suggests to some that the poem was meant as a parody of the Divine Comedy, but it seems rather a weak parody. The work shows a significant advancement in Chaucer's art from the earlier Book of the Duchess. A reference at the end of the work to a "man of great authority" reporting tidings of love has been interpreted as a reference to the wedding of Richard II and Anne or the betrothal of Philippa of Lancaster and John I of Portugal but such great events are treated so irreverently to make this unlikely. As with several other works by Chaucer the poem is apparently unfinished, although whether the ending was indeed left incomplete, has been lost, or is a deliberate rhetorical device is uncertain.
The terms galaxy and Milky Way first appeared in the English language in this poem.
"See yonder, lo, the Galaxyë
Which men clepeth the Milky Wey,
For hit is whyt."—Geoffrey Chaucer, Geoffrey Chaucer The House of Fame, c. 1380.[1]
- ^ Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.