Octavian has similarities with the Middle English
Breton lays and is imbued, like much of
medieval romance, with the characteristics of folktale and myth. It is also a family romance, and “nurture is a particularly important theme in ''Octavian's'' treatment of the family.” But like many other Middle English verse romances, its displays a flexible style during the course of its story, beginning in this case as a tale of suffering and endurance in a similar vein to the 12th-century Latin “Constance saga” from which the 14th century Middle English tale of Emaré and
Geoffrey Chaucer's story of Constance derive, but ending in the more heroic vein of a
chanson de geste. The middle of the romance is almost a burlesque comedy between Florent and his father Clement who, “obsessed with merchandise, is the great comic character of the romance, and he fights a long and losing battle against the boy's inability to extract the smallest financial advantage from any commercial transaction entrusted to him." It is not common for the mercantile classes to be given a major role in medieval romance and “its treatment of social class distinguishes
Octavian from other similar Middle English romances.” The tale of Octavian uses a number of story elements found in other Middle English verse romances of the 14th century.
Queen falsely accused The opening sequences of many Middle English romances feature a queen or princess or other noble lady who has been unjustly accused of a crime and who narrowly escapes death by being sent into exile, often known as the “calumniated queen”. Octavian's queen is snatched away from execution at the last minute and sent into exile. Geoffrey Chaucer's heroine Constance, in his
Canterbury Tale from the Man of Law, is married to a heathen king and then bundled into a small boat and set adrift on the orders of her mother-in-law, when all about her have been brutally murdered.
Emaré, daughter of the Emperor of Germany, is bundled into a similar boat following her father's vow to kill her.
Crescentia is accused by her brother-in-law of infidelity. Cristobel, daughter of the Earl of Artois, in a 14th-century English verse romance
Sir Eglamour of Artois, is bundled into a boat and set adrift, following the birth of her illegitimate son. Margaret, wife of the king of Aragon in a 14th-century English verse romance
Sir Tryamour, is sent into exile, which is intended by the evil steward of her husband's kingdom to end swiftly in death. The wife of Sir Isumbras is captured by a Saracen king in a popular early-14th-century Middle English verse romance
Sir Isumbras and sent to live in his land. The daughter of the Emperor of Rome in the early-13th-century Old French romance
William of Palerne sends herself into exile and is hunted mercilessly following an elopement with her lover William, during which adventure they don bearskins and are protected by a werewolf.
Significant involvement of animals Octavian's two young sons are snatched away by a lion and an ape during their journey into exile with their mother. Margaret in the verse romance
Sir Tryamour has her cause aided by Sir Roger's intelligent dog. Cristobel, in the English romance
Sir Eglamour of Artois, has her baby son snatched away by a
griffin and delivered stork-like to the King of Israel. William and Emelior, in the mid-14th century Middle English version of
William of Palerne, dress themselves in deerskins as another disguise, when the bearskins they are wearing have become a handicap to them.
Sir Isumbras's three sons are snatched away by a lion, a leopard and a unicorn and with the departure of his wife as well, he is left all alone. But his children appear again at the end of this romance, riding the animals who stole them away. The motif of the theft of young children by animals who do them no harm occurs in the legend of Saint Eustace, found in the
Guilte Legende of the mid-13th century. It occurs also in the 13th-century romance
William of Palerne, or
William and the Werewolf, when the young boy William is taken by a wolf who crosses the sea with him and cares for the child in its den. Sir Yvain, in
Chrétien de Troyes' romance
The Knight of the Lion, retold in the 14th century Middle English romance
Yvain and Gawain, adopts a lion halfway through the story, a lion that helps him subsequently to win a number of battles.
Young man who does not know his origins Florent is taken as a small baby and brought up as the son of a Paris merchant, knowing nothing of his true heritage. In the Middle English Breton Lay
Sir Degaré, the eponymous hero is taken as a baby to the door of a hermitage and brought up by the hermit's sister and her husband, knowing nothing of his royal mother. Cristobel's little boy in the romance
Sir Eglamour of Artois is similarly delivered into a new family at the very start of his life and only knows his real mother when, like Sir Degaré, he wins her hand in marriage in a tournament near the end of the tale. Neither Perceval, in the Middle English Arthurian romance
Sir Perceval of Galles, nor the Fair Unknown in Thomas Chestre's
Lybeaus Desconus, has any idea who his father is when he arrives at King Arthur's court.
Giants Giants abound in Middle English romance. Octavian defeats the Saracen giant who is menacing Paris. Sir Eglamour of Artois fights with one in a forest far to the west. The Fair Unknown kills three. King Arthur kills one on his journey to meet the Roman army in battle in the
Alliterative Morte Arthure, as does Sir Yvain in the Middle English
Yvain and Gawain and Perceval in the Middle English
Sir Perceval of Galles.
Unawareness of relatives Following the battle with the giant, Florent speaks with the Emperor of Rome who, in the original Old French romance and in the
Southern Octavian, despite feelings of natural affinity for the boy, does not learn who his son is until the very end of the romance.
Sir Degaré jousts for his mother's hand in marriage, unaware of who she is. Sir Tryamour jousts with his real father in a tournament, neither of them knowing who the other is. Sir Eglamour jousts with his son who does not recognise him.
Fighting to rescue a maiden Sir Florent performs great feats of heroism in order to woo and finally to seize Marsabelle from the clutches of her father, the Saracen king. Tryamour concludes his romance with a series of battles to rescue a maiden. Ipomadon proves himself endlessly in battle and tournament before rescuing his true love from the clutches of his rival at the very end of the romance
Ipomadon. The Fair Unknown travels on a quest to rescue a damsel in distress in Thomas Chestre's
Libeaus Desconus.
Heritage rediscovered At the end of this romance
Octavian, Florent is reunited with his mother and brother and recognises that the Emperor of Rome is his father. Likewise,
Sir Degaré is reunited with his mother and his father, Sir Tryamour with his father, Sir Eglamour of Artois with his true love Cristobel and Sir Isumbras with his entire family. Unlike the Greek tragedies
Oedipus Rex and
Ion, whose plots also involve a young man brought up without any knowledge of his true origins, these Medieval romances are at heart comedies. All turns out well in the end. ==Notes==