Fourteenth-century English Poetry: Contexts and ReadingsClarendon Press, 1983 - 224 pages |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-3 sur 15
Page 66
... serve the more al out of mynde . Is thys fortune , not I , or infortune ? Though I go lowse , tyed am I with a lune.89 The pattern is stable , though traced in miniature : the ' gentle- man - poet ' , here particularly influenced by ...
... serve the more al out of mynde . Is thys fortune , not I , or infortune ? Though I go lowse , tyed am I with a lune.89 The pattern is stable , though traced in miniature : the ' gentle- man - poet ' , here particularly influenced by ...
Page 154
... serve . In hire presence I recche nat to sterve ... ( K. T. , II . 1395-8 ) Similarly , the soliloquy of Arcite which Palamon , escaped from prison , overhears is shaped afresh , with special emphasis , not present in the equivalent ...
... serve . In hire presence I recche nat to sterve ... ( K. T. , II . 1395-8 ) Similarly , the soliloquy of Arcite which Palamon , escaped from prison , overhears is shaped afresh , with special emphasis , not present in the equivalent ...
Page 172
... serve his pur- poses . But Chaucer may not have been content to minimize the final impression of human suffering by means of a plain rejec- tion of the importance of worldly affairs : neither may he have been content to rest his case ...
... serve his pur- poses . But Chaucer may not have been content to minimize the final impression of human suffering by means of a plain rejec- tion of the importance of worldly affairs : neither may he have been content to rest his case ...
Table des matières
Standards | 1 |
Mappings | 52 |
Alliterative Verse and Piers Plowman | 86 |
Droits d'auteur | |
9 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
accepted alliterative poem alliterative poetry Alliterative Revival alliterative verse Anglo-French Anglo-Norman Literature Arcite Arcite's artistic Auchinleck Manuscript Boccaccio's Boethian British Library Canterbury Chaucer classes contemporary context courtly death Destruction of Troy divine dramatic earlier East Anglia EETS England English poetry fact fifteenth century French Gaunt Gawain-poet gods Gower Green Knight Harley Henry human Ibid interesting Italian J. A. W. Bennett John Gower K. B. McFarlane kind King Knight's Tale Langland language later fourteenth century Latin literary Lydgate Lyrics Mars medieval English Medieval London medieval poet Middle English moral Morte Arthure narrative nature non-alliterative Oxford Palamon Parlement of Foules Piers Plowman poetic Prologue prose readers reading religious rhymed Richard Saint Salter Saturn sense Sir Gawain stanza swich tail-rhyme romances teenth century temple Teseida theme ther tion tradition translation Troilus and Criseyde Venus vernacular W. W. Skeat William writing Yorkshire þat