The prologue, The knightes tale, The nonne prestes tale, ed. by R. Morris1869 |
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Page xxiv
... cause of their difference , he forgives them , and proposes the method of deciding their claim to Emilia by a combat of a hundred on each side , to which they gladly agree . Bk . vi . Palemone and Arcita live splendidly at Athens , and ...
... cause of their difference , he forgives them , and proposes the method of deciding their claim to Emilia by a combat of a hundred on each side , to which they gladly agree . Bk . vi . Palemone and Arcita live splendidly at Athens , and ...
Page xxv
... causes favourable signs to be given to Arcita . In the same manner Palemone closes his religious observances with a prayer to Venus . His prayer , being also personified , sets out for the temple of Venus on Mount Citherone , which is ...
... causes favourable signs to be given to Arcita . In the same manner Palemone closes his religious observances with a prayer to Venus . His prayer , being also personified , sets out for the temple of Venus on Mount Citherone , which is ...
Page xxvi
... caused the language generally to be in a very unsettled state , and the re- volution thus commenced was accelerated by the Norman Con- quest , which followed in the year 1066. Norman rule introduced a new civilisation of a far higher ...
... caused the language generally to be in a very unsettled state , and the re- volution thus commenced was accelerated by the Norman Con- quest , which followed in the year 1066. Norman rule introduced a new civilisation of a far higher ...
Page xxvii
... caused by the infusion of the Norman- French element . The additions to the vocabulary were at first small , but they gradually increased , and about the middle of the fourteenth century they formed no inconsiderable part of an almost ...
... caused by the infusion of the Norman- French element . The additions to the vocabulary were at first small , but they gradually increased , and about the middle of the fourteenth century they formed no inconsiderable part of an almost ...
Page xxviii
... cause ; and if we compare his dialect with that of any writer of an earlier date , we shall find that in compass , flexibility , expressiveness , grace , and of all the higher qualities of poetical diction , he gave it at once the ...
... cause ; and if we compare his dialect with that of any writer of an earlier date , we shall find that in compass , flexibility , expressiveness , grace , and of all the higher qualities of poetical diction , he gave it at once the ...
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The Prologue, the Knightes Tale, the Nonne Prestes Tale, Ed. by R. Morris Geoffrey Chaucer No preview available - 2016 |
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