Chaucer: A Bibliographical ManualMacmillan, 1908 - 579 pages |
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... Fragments " of the Tales . The Ar- rangement of the Tales : ( 1 ) Evidence of Time and Place Allusions in the Text . ( 2 ) Evidence of Other Allusions in the Text . ( 3 ) Evidence of the MSS . List of the MSS , the Order of the Tales in ...
... Fragments " of the Tales . The Ar- rangement of the Tales : ( 1 ) Evidence of Time and Place Allusions in the Text . ( 2 ) Evidence of Other Allusions in the Text . ( 3 ) Evidence of the MSS . List of the MSS , the Order of the Tales in ...
Page 103
... fragment is preserved in the work of Jerome against Jovinian referred to above . Chaucer used nearly all of the existing text , in the WBprol . , see lines 235-378 , in the Merchant's Tale , see lines 49-62 , in the Manciple's Tale ...
... fragment is preserved in the work of Jerome against Jovinian referred to above . Chaucer used nearly all of the existing text , in the WBprol . , see lines 235-378 , in the Merchant's Tale , see lines 49-62 , in the Manciple's Tale ...
Page 117
... fragment of the poem which he printed . Previous to the issue of the above - mentioned facsimile , various texts of the 1532 Chaucer had been printed , viz .: By the Chaucer Society , the texts of the Book of the Duchesse , the House of ...
... fragment of the poem which he printed . Previous to the issue of the above - mentioned facsimile , various texts of the 1532 Chaucer had been printed , viz .: By the Chaucer Society , the texts of the Book of the Duchesse , the House of ...
Page 121
... fragments of Chaucer , we should probably find them so soiled and mangled , that he would not thank us for asserting his claim to them . " Skeat I 31 ff . , Canon 117 ff . , gives elaborate analysis and discussion of this edition ; see ...
... fragments of Chaucer , we should probably find them so soiled and mangled , that he would not thank us for asserting his claim to them . " Skeat I 31 ff . , Canon 117 ff . , gives elaborate analysis and discussion of this edition ; see ...
Page 158
... fragments . How Chaucer would finally have arranged these fragments which remain we cannot with absolute certainty say . We can , of course , recognize the first , or A - fragment , because of its inseparable connection with the ...
... fragments . How Chaucer would finally have arranged these fragments which remain we cannot with absolute certainty say . We can , of course , recognize the first , or A - fragment , because of its inseparable connection with the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Anelida Ashmole Athen Balade Bell blackletter Boccaccio Bodley Boethius Book Brink Bukton Cambr Canon Cant Canterbury Canterbury Tales Caxton cesura Chaucer Society Chaucerian cited Clerk's Tale Complaint copy Duchesse Ellesmere endlink Engl English envoy Fairfax 16 foll fragment Furnivall Gamelyn Geoffrey Chaucer Globe Chaucer Gower Harley heading headlink Hist House of Fame ibid introd Knight Knight's Tale Koch Koeppel Legend Librum vnum lines Lond London Lounsbury Lydgate Lydgate's Melibeus Minor Poems Modernizations and Translations Monk's Tale Nun's Priest Nun's Priest's Nun's Priest's Tale Pardoner's Tale Parlement of Foules poet printed Ch Prints and Editions Prioress prol prologue prose reprinted Rime Romaunt says Scogan Section Selden Shirley Six-Text Skeat VII Specimens Speght spurious Squire Squire's Tale stanzas story Stow Stud Studies Tale is printed Thynne trac Troilus Troilus and Cressida Tyrwhitt Urry Venus verse Wife of Bath
Popular passages
Page 484 - O, how this spring of love resembleth The uncertain glory of an April day ; Which now shows all the beauty of the sun, And by and by a cloud takes all away ! Re-enter PANTHINO.
Page 484 - As watchman to my heart. But, good my brother, Do not, as some ungracious pastors do, Show me the steep and thorny way to heaven, Whilst, like a puffd and reckless libertine, Himself the primrose path of dalliance treads And recks not his own rede.
Page 56 - Chaucer, thogh he kan but lewedly On metres and on rymyng craftily, Hath seyd hem in swich Englissh as he kan, Of olde tyme, as knoweth many a man. And if he have noght seyd hem, leve brother, In o book, he hath seyd hem in another. For he hath toold of loveris up and doun Mo than Ovide made of mencioun, In hise Episteles that been ful olde; What sholde I tellen hem, syn they ben tolde?
Page 485 - He was short-sholdred, brood, a thikke knarre, Ther nas no dore that he nolde heve of harre, Or breke it, at a renning, with his heed. His berd as any sowe or fox was reed, And ther-to brood, as though it were a spade.
Page 519 - Tale, of the Canterbury Tales, in 6 parallel Texts (from the 6 MSS named below), together with Tables, showing the Groups of the Tales, and their varying order in 38 MSS of the Tales, and in 5 old printed editions, and also Specimens from several MSS of the "Moveable Prologues...
Page 520 - XV. The Man of Law's, Shipman's, and Prioress's Tales, with Chaucer's own Tale of Sir Thopas, in 6 parallel Texts from the MSS above named, and 10 coloured drawings of Tellers of Tales, after the originals in the Ellesmere MS.
Page 521 - XXIII. Odd Texts of Chaucer's Minor Poems, Part I, containing 1. two MS fragments of ' The Parlament of Foules ; ' 2. the two differing versions of ' The Prologue to the Legende of Good Women,' arranged so as to show their differences ; 3.
Page 468 - Chaucer's time ended in e originally ended in a, we may reasonably presume that our ancestors first passed from the broader sound of a to the thinner sound of e feminine, and not at once from a to e mute.
Page 521 - The Cronycle made by Chaucer,' both from MSS written by Shirley, Chaucer's contemporary. XXIV. A One-Text Print of Chaucer's Minor Poems, being the best Text from the Parallel-Text Edition, Part I, containing, I. The Dethe of Blaunche the Duchesse, II.
Page 496 - Rocks, caves, lakes, fens, bogs, dens, and shades of death (Paradise Lost, ii. 621), and in Pope's: And ten low words oft creep in one dull line (Essay on Criticism, 1.