A One-text Print of Chaucer's Minor Poems: Being the Best Text of Each Poem in the Parallel-text Edition |
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Page 1
... tyme / to endure With - oute slepe / and be in sorwe And I ne may / no nyght ' ne morwe Slepe / and thys Melancolye1 And drede I haue / for to dye 20 [ 1 Bodl . 638 leaves ont lines 24-95 . A leaf is out of the MS . ] 24 Defaulte of ...
... tyme / to endure With - oute slepe / and be in sorwe And I ne may / no nyght ' ne morwe Slepe / and thys Melancolye1 And drede I haue / for to dye 20 [ 1 Bodl . 638 leaves ont lines 24-95 . A leaf is out of the MS . ] 24 Defaulte of ...
Page 2
... tyme And other poets put in rime To rede , and for to be in minde While men loued the lawe in kinde 56 This boke ne speake , but of such thinges Of quenes liues , and of kings And many other things smalle That me thought a wonder thing ...
... tyme And other poets put in rime To rede , and for to be in minde While men loued the lawe in kinde 56 This boke ne speake , but of such thinges Of quenes liues , and of kings And many other things smalle That me thought a wonder thing ...
Page 11
... tyme quod I Go we faste / and gañ to ryde Whan we came to the forest syde 372 Euery mañ / didde ryght ' anoon ) As to huntynge / fille to doon The mayster hunte / anoon fote hote With a grete horne / blewe thre mote At the vncoupylynge ...
... tyme quod I Go we faste / and gañ to ryde Whan we came to the forest syde 372 Euery mañ / didde ryght ' anoon ) As to huntynge / fille to doon The mayster hunte / anoon fote hote With a grete horne / blewe thre mote At the vncoupylynge ...
Page 23
... tyme turned / to no thynge Thorgh to mochel / knowlachynge 792 796 For that tyme / yowthe my maistresse Gouerned me in ydelnesse For hyt was in my first youthe And thoo ful lytel / goode y couthe For al my werkes / were flyttynge 800 That ...
... tyme turned / to no thynge Thorgh to mochel / knowlachynge 792 796 For that tyme / yowthe my maistresse Gouerned me in ydelnesse For hyt was in my first youthe And thoo ful lytel / goode y couthe For al my werkes / were flyttynge 800 That ...
Page 33
... tyme / leve hyt wel 1148 For be ryght siker / I durste noght ' For al this worlde / tel hir my thoght ' Ne I wolde haue wraththed hir / trewly For wostow why she was lady 1152 Of the body / she had the hert And who hath that / may not ...
... tyme / leve hyt wel 1148 For be ryght siker / I durste noght ' For al this worlde / tel hir my thoght ' Ne I wolde haue wraththed hir / trewly For wostow why she was lady 1152 Of the body / she had the hert And who hath that / may not ...
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Common terms and phrases
a-non aftyr Allas alwey ANELIDA AND ARCITE anoon CAMB CAMBR Canterbury Tales certeyn Chaucer compleynt corr dede deth drede Enyas euere euery F. J. FURNIVALL FAIRFAX fals ffor flour fynde grene gret grete hath haue herde herte heuene hire hise HOUSE OF FAME hyre Iason koude kynde kynge lady leaf LEGEND LIBR loue lyght lyve mañ maner myght myn hert neuer noght nyght othir PARLAMENT OF FOULES peyne pitee pleyne quod rede ryght saugħ sawgħ schal sche Second Series seyde seye seyn shal shulde slepe somme sone sorwe sothe speke swete swich Tale Thanne ther therfore thoght thoo thorgħ thou thow thyn thynge trewe trewly trouthe tyme UNIV Venus vpon W. W. SKEAT wele weye whan wolde þat þis
Popular passages
Page 100 - SERIES], due in advance on the 1st of JANUARY, and should be paid either to the Society's Account at the Head Office of the Union Bank of London, Princes Street, London, EG, or by Cheque, Postal Order, or MoneyOrder to the Hon.
Page 100 - Society was started by Dr. Furnivall in 1864 for the purpose of bringing the mass of Old English Literature within the reach of the ordinary student, and of wiping away the reproach under which England hud long rested, of having felt little interest in the monuments of her early language and life.
Page 100 - ... for which more prints of Manuscripts were and are wanted ; and it is hardly too much to say that every line of Chaucer contains points that need reconsideration. The founder (Dr Furnivall) began with The Canterbury Tales, and has given of them (in parallel columns in Royal 4to) six of the best theretofore unprinted Manuscripts known.
Page 100 - The Society's issue for 1868, in the First Series, is, I. The Prologue and Knight's 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 99 - AD 1246 (the Latin source of the French original of Chaucer's Melibe), edited from the MSS, by Dr Thor Sundby. Of the Second Series, the issue for 1874 is, 9. Essays on Chaucer, his Words and Works, Part II.: 3. John of Hoveden's Practica Chilindri, edited from the MS, with a translation, by Mr E. Brock. 4. Chaucer's use of the final -e, by Joseph Payne, Esq.
Page 100 - 851 (separate issues of the Texts forming Part I of the Six-Text edition.) The issue for 1869, in the First Series, is, VIII. The Miller's, Reeve's, and Cook's Tales: Ellesmere MS.
Page 243 - Hap helpith hardy man alday quod he What ende that I make it shal be so And gerte hym with his swerd & gan to go And forth he rit til he to rome is come 1776 And al a-lone his weye hathe he nome Vn-to the hous of Colatyn ful ryght Doun was the sonne & day hath lost hire lyght And in he comyth in to a...