ABSTRACT
Unlike Thomas of Hailes’s Love Rune (p. 156, above), this courtly roun (l. 44) deals with the perennial sufferings of an earthly lover. The meter is seven-line, tail-rhyme stanzas; see Introduction, type 16, page 32.
Unlike Thomas of Hailes’s Love Rune (p. 156, above), this courtly roun (l. 44) deals with the perennial sufferings of an earthly lover. The meter is seven-line, tail-rhyme stanzas; see Introduction, type 16, page 32.