The Cultural Context of Chaucer's FabliauxStanford University, 1968 - 634 pages |
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Page 24
... biforn ; Who bloweth in a trumpe or in a horn ? The fruyt of every tale is for to seye . This is not merely a device to save time ; more impor- tantly , it is an invitation to the audience to look for the grain beneath the chaff of the ...
... biforn ; Who bloweth in a trumpe or in a horn ? The fruyt of every tale is for to seye . This is not merely a device to save time ; more impor- tantly , it is an invitation to the audience to look for the grain beneath the chaff of the ...
Page 25
... biforn ; Who bloweth in a trumpe or in an horn ? The fruyt of every tale is for to seye : They ete , and drynke , and daunce , and synge , and pleye . ( 701-07 ) · " Every In effect , the Man of Law says : " I don't want to spend so ...
... biforn ; Who bloweth in a trumpe or in an horn ? The fruyt of every tale is for to seye : They ete , and drynke , and daunce , and synge , and pleye . ( 701-07 ) · " Every In effect , the Man of Law says : " I don't want to spend so ...
Page 294
... Biforn this day , of swich a question . Who sholde make a demonstracion That every man sholde have yliche his part As of the soun or savour of a fart ? " ( 2216-26 ) 64 In addition to Fleming , see J. Edwin Whitesell , " Chaucer's ...
... Biforn this day , of swich a question . Who sholde make a demonstracion That every man sholde have yliche his part As of the soun or savour of a fart ? " ( 2216-26 ) 64 In addition to Fleming , see J. Edwin Whitesell , " Chaucer's ...
Table des matières
Allegory and Rhetoric | 5 |
Lyric Poetry as Natural Music | 29 |
Literature for Delight | 64 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Absolon action Alisoun allegorical allegorical tradition amuse Art de dictier attitude audience Baisieux balade Bédier Berangier Boccaccio Bodel Boethius Canterbury Canterbury Tales characters Chaucer Chaucer's fabliaux chevalier Christian churl clerks comedy comic critics Dame Decameron defined delight Deschamps discussion entertainment Eustache Deschamps fables fabula fiction fourteenth century friar Friar's Tale function genre Gombert Hugh humor husband Ibid idea indicate intended kind knight ladies liau liaux literary lover lyric poetry Machaut Merchant's Tale meunier Middle Ages Middle English Miller's Tale moral musique naturele narrative natural music Nicholas Nykrog obscenity offers Old French Parlement of Foules pleasure plot poems poet poetic theory Preface to Chaucer priest profit Prologue purpose Reeve's Tale references reveals rhetorical romances satire says serious Shipman's Tale social songs Sources and Analogues story style suggests Summoner's Tale Symkyn tell tion treatise trick truth upper-class vilain vulgarity wife words writing