''Trobar clus'' (), or closed form, was a complex and obscure style of poetry used by
troubadours for their more discerning audiences, and it was only truly appreciated by an elite few. It was developed extensively by
Marcabru and
Arnaut Daniel, but by 1200 its inaccessibility had led to its disappearance. Among the imitators of Marcabru were
Alegret and
Marcoat, who claimed himself to write ''vers contradizentz'' (contradictory verses), indicative of the incomprehensibility of the ''trobar clus'' style. Below is a sample of the style from Marcoat's ''
sirventes'' ''Mentre m'obri eis huisel'', wherein the poet himself remarks on his ''moz clus'' (closed words):
:''Mon ''serventes'' no val plus,''
:''que faitz es de bos moz clus''
:''apren lo, Domeing Sarena.''
[Chambers, 91.]
Among the late twelfth-century practitionars of ''trobar clus'' was
Peire d'Alvernhe, an imitator of Marcabru, while
Raimbaut d'Aurenga of the ''
trobar ric'' style was influenced by Marcoat. The only
trobairitz (female troubadour) to use the trobar clus with mastery was
Lombarda around 1216.
Notes
Sources
*Bloch, R. Howard
''Etymologies and Genealogies: A Literary Anthropology of the French Middle Ages''.Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983. .
*Chambers, Frank M
''An Introduction to Old Provençal Versification''.Diane Publishing, 1985. .
Cunnan wiki source (GFDL)
See also
*
Trobar leu
*
Trobar ric
{{Western medieval lyric forms
Western medieval lyric forms
Old Occitan literature