Analyses the different ways that three canonical texts-Chaucer\'s Troilus and Criseyde; its source, Boccaccio\'s Il Filostrato; and its fifteenth-century Scottish derivative, Robert Henryson\'s Testament of Cresseid -treat two figures, Troilus and Criseyde, and how those differences affect our understanding of literary history..
Analyses the different ways that three canonical texts-Chaucer\'s Troilus and Criseyde; its source, Boccaccio\'s Il Filostrato; and its fifteenth-century Scottish derivative, Robert Henryson\'s Testament of Cresseid -treat two figures, Troilus and Criseyde, and how those differences affect our understanding of literary history.