Gervase of Melkley


Gervase of Melkley or Gervase of Melkeley was an Anglo-Norman scholar and poet.

Biography

Gervais was born in England c. 1185.
Around 1200, he studied in France, probably in Rouen, under poet John of Hauville.
He spent his adult life in England, where he is last attested in 1219.
English chronicler Matthew Paris mentions him as an astrologer and an authority for the life of Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury. Paris also describes him as the author of the epitaph on William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke, who died in 1219.
In his work, he refers to himself as Gervasius de Saltu Lacteo.

''Ars versificaria''

He wrote Ars versificaria c. 1208–1216, using both classical and medieval sources. Targeted at young students of rhetoric, it includes a list of recommended reading and mainly discusses rhetorical and grammatical figures, with examples, and gives some notes on word formation. It is also known as Ars poetica and De arte versificatoria et modo dictandi.
The book consists of three parts. The first part discusses basic principles common to all types of discourse. The second part is devoted to composition, discussing proverbs, elegance of style, arguments, rules of verse and prose composition. The third part deals with letter-writing.
Among his sources are ancient authors Horace, Cicero, Aelius Donatus and Juvenal, as well as Bernard Silvestris's Cosmographia, Alain of Lille's Anticlaudianus, John of Hauville's Architrenius, and Geoffrey of Vinsauf's Poetria nova. He also quotes the Book of Psalms and some of his own short poems.
The book is dedicated to a certain Johannes Albus.
The manuscript is conserved in Balliol College, Oxford.

Poems

As well as in Ars versificaria, his poems also survive in an early thirteenth-century collection of poetry known as Hunterian Anthology. Apart from works by Gervase, the anthology also includes works by Matthew of Vendôme, Geoffrey of Vinsauf, and some poems of unknown authorship.
His known poems, most of them in elegiac couplets, include:

Editions and translations

The Historical Works of Gervase of Canterbury, ed. William Stubbs .Gervais von Melkley: Ars Poetica, ed. Hans-Jürgen Gräbener.Gervais of Melkley's Treatise on the Art of Versifying and the Method of Composing in Prose: Translation and Commentary, Catherine Yodice Giles.A thirteenth-century anthology of rhetorical poems: Glasgow ms. Hunterian V.8.14, ed. Bruce Harbert.The Art of Making Verses, ed. and trans. Traugott Lawler, Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library 87.

Studies

The treatment of action in medieval poetics, 1175‐1280, John Gronbeck-Tedesco.Identitas, Similitudo, and Contrarietas in Gervasius of Melkley's Ars poetica: A Stasis of Style, William M. Purcell.Eros, Agape, and Rhetoric around 1200: Gervase of Melkley's Ars poetica and Gottfried von Strassburg's Tristan, Robert Glendinning.