This is a wide-ranging and detailed study of English narrative verse in
the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Piero Boitani describes and
analyses the undisputed masterpieces of narrative (such as the works of
the Gawain poet, Langland, Gower and Chaucer), as well as the anonymous
romances and specimens of religious and comic narrative which form the
background to the better-known poems. The book is divided by literary
genres or structural systems: chapters on the religious, comic and
romance traditions are followed by a discussion of dream and visionary
narratives and a chapter on story collections including those of Gower.
The rest of the book is devoted to Chaucer, who mastered all these
types.