Few medieval women wrote poetry, and those who did understandably tended to stick to safe subjects. Not so for bad-ass Gwerful Mechain (ca. 1460-1502), most known for her witty tribute to her genitalia—a poem that brashly responds to legendary Welsh poet Dafydd ap Gwilym's poem to his genitalia. This "englyn" (a four-line epigram with set syllables and rhymes) may be the earliest extant poem objecting to domestic violence by a European woman. The title's pronoun is ambiguous—it's unclear whether Mechain was standing up for herself or someone else. |