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The Digital Index of Middle English Verse
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DIMEV 3660
IMEV 2274
NIMEV 2274
My very joy and most perfect pleasure
A roundel, translated from the French of Charles d’Orléans (Champollion-Figeac (1842), 33) — 14 lines
Author(s): Charles d’Orléans
Subjects: roundels; love lyrics; lovers, addresses to beloved
Versification: — roundel



Manuscript Witnesses:
1.Source: London, British Library Harley 682, f. 67v
First Lines:
MI verry ioy and most parfit plesere
Whiche are of me and all y haue maystres…
Last Lines:
…So willith me se yow so dowtles
That half how moche y kan not say yow here
Note: As written, repeats first words of lines 1-2 at end to indicate going back to first four lines of the roundel.
Facsimiles:
Digital Facsimile of British Library Harley MS 682. https://www.bl.uk/manuscripts/FullDisplay.aspx?index=0&ref=Harley_MS_682.
Editions:
Taylor, G. Watson. Poems Written in English by Charles Duke of OrleansOrleans, during his Captivity in England after the Battle of Azincourt Roxburghe Club 44. London, 1827: 145-6.
Steele, Robert, ed. Charles of Orleans: The English Poems. Vol. 1. EETS o.s. 215 (1941); vol. 2. ed. Robert Steele and Mabel Day, o.s. 220; repr. as one volume, 1970: 111.
Arn, Mary-Jo, ed. Fortunes Stabilnes: Charles of Orleans’s English Book of Love. A Critical Edition. Binghamton, NY: Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, 1994: 257-8.