A Temporary Preface to the Six-text Edition of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales: Part 1, Attempting to Show the True Order of the Tales, and the Days and Stages of the Pilgrimage |
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Page 13
... night at Dartford . It may suffice to observe that five days were occupied in his journey to Canterbury , where he arrived on July 4th , remaining one night , and proceeded on the following day , being Sunday , to Dover . The journal ...
... night at Dartford . It may suffice to observe that five days were occupied in his journey to Canterbury , where he arrived on July 4th , remaining one night , and proceeded on the following day , being Sunday , to Dover . The journal ...
Page 15
... night at Dart- ford , " Rochester , and Ospringe , like King John of France , and Queen Isabella of England before him ; whether the Pilgrims dined at Sittingbourne , also like King John . For this purpose we return to the Tales , and ...
... night at Dart- ford , " Rochester , and Ospringe , like King John of France , and Queen Isabella of England before him ; whether the Pilgrims dined at Sittingbourne , also like King John . For this purpose we return to the Tales , and ...
Page 17
... night , is negatived by the many references in the Tales to the party being on horseback while the Tales were being told . с Tales are , to use Tyrwhitt's phrase quoted above , § 3. THE PILGRIMS ' HORSES , AND RATE OF RIDING . 17.
... night , is negatived by the many references in the Tales to the party being on horseback while the Tales were being told . с Tales are , to use Tyrwhitt's phrase quoted above , § 3. THE PILGRIMS ' HORSES , AND RATE OF RIDING . 17.
Page 19
... night's resting- place , Dartford , 15 miles from London . B. II . Tyrwhitt's placing of the Man of Law's Tale after the Cook's ( or Gamelyn ) is justified by all the MSS I here now , sir . ' ' Dear me , ' said I , ' I'm very sorry to ...
... night's resting- place , Dartford , 15 miles from London . B. II . Tyrwhitt's placing of the Man of Law's Tale after the Cook's ( or Gamelyn ) is justified by all the MSS I here now , sir . ' ' Dear me , ' said I , ' I'm very sorry to ...
Page 20
... night of it ' at Dartford , or been very tired with their journey , so that they started late next morning , and may indeed , like King John , have had their dinner before setting out . Here are the first lines of the Man of Law's ...
... night of it ' at Dartford , or been very tired with their journey , so that they started late next morning , and may indeed , like King John , have had their dinner before setting out . Here are the first lines of the Man of Law's ...
Other editions - View all
A Temporary Preface to the Six-Text Edition of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales ... Frederick James Furnivall No preview available - 2008 |
A Temporary Preface to the Six-Text Edition of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales ... Frederick James Furnivall No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
apud Bob-up-and-down Boughton Boughton-under-Blean Bradshaw Buttillaria Camb Cambridge Canterbury Tales Cantorbérie Chaucer Chaucer's Canterbury Chaucer's Minor Poems Compleynt consimili elemosina Corp Corpus Dartford dinner domine Regine edition of Chaucer's eiusdem elemosina Regine Elles Ellesmere Ellis eodem F. J. Furnivall Fragment Franklin's Tale Fratribus Friar's Gamelyn Garderoba Goddes Harbledown Harl Harleian hath haue Heng Hengwrt ibidem iiij.d iij.s ij.d ij.s Iohanni issue Item Iunij ix.d journey King Knight Knight's Tale Lansd Lansdowne Law's Tale leaf lines Link London Manciple's manus manus proprias miles Morris MSS read nobles Northern omit Ospringe Oxford parallel Texts Parson's Petworth Pilgrims plural poet printed Prioress's Prologue quod relacion rhimes road Rochester sancti Schoo Second Series Shipman's Shipman's Tale Sittingbourne six MSS Six-Text edition Skeat Society's sororibus stanza Summoner's Tale of Gamelyn ther thyng tyme Tyrwhitt valent vj.s whan words Wright þat
Popular passages
Page 110 - Would that I Had but some portion of that mastery That from the rose-hung lanes of woody Kent Through these five hundred years such songs have sent To us, who, meshed within this smoky net Of unrejoicing labour, love them yet. And thou, O Master! — Yea, my Master still, Whatever feet have scaled Parnassus' hill, Since like thy measures, clear and sweet and strong, Thames...
Page 91 - And where he should cross himself, to be armed and to make himself strong to bear the cross with Christ, he crosseth himself to drive the cross from him, and blesseth himself with a cross from the cross ; and if he leave it undone, he thinketh it no small sin, and that God is highly displeased with him, and if any misfortune chance, thinketh it is therefore, which is also idolatry and not God's word.
Page 131 - Ladies the meaning hereof, which is this : They which honour the Flower, a thing fading with every blast, are such as look after beauty and worldly pleasure ; but they that honour the Leaf, which abideth with the root notwithstanding the frosts and winter storms, are they which follow virtue and during qualities without regard of worldly respects.
Page 30 - and in wordes fewe, Ost, of his craft somwhat I wil you schewe. I say, my lord can such a subtilite, (But al his craft ye may nought wite of me, And somwhat helpe I yit to his worchynge...
Page 111 - ... stream scarce fettered bore the bream along Unto the bastioned bridge, his only chain. O Master, pardon me, if yet in vain Thou art my Master, and I fail to bring Before men's eyes the image of the thing My heart is filled with : thou whose dreamy eyes Beheld the flush to Cressid's cheeks arise, 20 When Troilus rode up the praising street, As clearly as they saw thy townsmen meet Those who in vineyards of Poictou withstood The glittering horror of the steel-topped wood.