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William of Waddington

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William of Waddington was an Anglo-Norman poet of the thirteenth century, best known as the author of Manuel des pechiez. He may have been a priest at Rydal.[1]

The Manuel des pechiez ("Manual of the Sins") is a didactic poem, written between 1250 and 1270, containing 1200 octosyllabic rhyming lines that combine practical moral education for lay people with elements of confession. It was the source for Robert Mannyng's better-known Handlyng Synne (1303). Waddington in turn interpolates lines from Nicholas Bozon's "Gospel Poem".[2]

References

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  1. ^ Russell, Josiah C. (February 1931). "Some Thirteenth-Century Anglo-Norman Writers". Modern Philology. 28 (3): 261. JSTOR 433660.
  2. ^ Holmes, Urban T. (1952). "Review of Klenke, Seven More Poems by Nicholas Bozon". Speculum. 27 (3): 396–397. JSTOR 2853111.
  • Émile-Jules-François Arnould, Le Manuel des péchés, étude de littérature religieuse anglo-normande, XIIIe siècle, Paris, Droz, 1940
  • Gaston Paris, Wilham de Wadington, auteur du Manuel des péchés. Macé de la Charité, auteur d'une Bible en vers français, Paris, Impr. nationale, 1881