<Dd> On viol, harp and rote </Dd> <Dd> Carried it forth from that region...</Dd> <P> Scholars have to then decide whether to take this description as truth or fiction . </P> <P> Period examples of performance practice, of which there are few, show a quiet scene with a household servant performing for the king or lord and a few other people, usually unaccompanied . According to scholar Christopher Page, whether or not a piece was accompanied depended on the availability of instruments and people to accompany--in a courtly setting . For troubadours or minstrels, pieces were often accompanied by fiddle, also called a vielle, or a harp . Courtly musicians also played the vielle and the harp, as well as different types of viols and flutes as well . </P>

What images does the poet use to describe the cambridge ladies