Date: Thu, 20 Oct 1994 14:50:29 EDT
From: Wayne Glowka wglowka[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]MAIL.GAC.PEACHNET.EDU
Subject: Animal Gender, Again
The comments I received earlier about the pronouns used here and there for
animals were interesting, but inconclusive. The problem of mixed up gender
for animals with specified sex showed up in my reading last night in
Vinaver's 1971 edition of Malory's _Works_ (original text before 1471, the
year of Malory's death). In this passage, read Malory's normal _brachet_
for _bracket_, 'a female dog':
And anone thys lityll bracket felte a savoure of sir Trystram. He
lepte uppon hym and lycked hys learys and hys earys, and than he whyned and
quested, and she smelled at hys feete and at hys hondis and on al the
partyes of hys body that she myght com to. (p. 309)
As far as I can tell, Tristram is not leaping and licking on the dog and
Damsel Brangwayn and La Beall Isode are not sniffing at Tristram's feet,
hands, and other accessible body parts. Apparently, the dog is referred to
with both _he_ (surely not a remnant of _heo_!) and _she_.
At any rate, this confusion is not limited to our times.
Wayne Glowka
Professor of English
Director of Research and Graduate Student Services
Georgia College
Milledgeville, GA 31061
912-453-4222
wglowka[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]mail.gac.peachnet.edu