The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer: With an Essay Upon His Language and Versification, an Introductory Discourse, Notes, and a Glossary, 4 tomasW. Pickering and R. and S. Prowett, 1822 |
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160 psl.
... poem by one of this sect in Ms. Bod . 3869. James . 32. which is entitled " Dicta cujusdam Goliardi Anglici , " and begins thus : Omnibus in Galliâ , Anglus Goliardus , Obediens et humilis , frater non bastardus , Goliæ discipulus ...
... poem by one of this sect in Ms. Bod . 3869. James . 32. which is entitled " Dicta cujusdam Goliardi Anglici , " and begins thus : Omnibus in Galliâ , Anglus Goliardus , Obediens et humilis , frater non bastardus , Goliæ discipulus ...
171 psl.
... poem entitled Philostrato , or by the Decameron , in which one of the characters is so called . In the Midsummer Night's Dream , of which the principal subject is plainly taken from this Tale , a Philostrate is also introduced , as a ...
... poem entitled Philostrato , or by the Decameron , in which one of the characters is so called . In the Midsummer Night's Dream , of which the principal subject is plainly taken from this Tale , a Philostrate is also introduced , as a ...
174 psl.
... Poem alludes ( as I suspect ) to the intended marriage between John of Gaunt and Blanche of Lancaster , which took place in 1359 , it will follow that the Poem of Palamon and Arcite must have been composed after that period . Ver . 1932 ...
... Poem alludes ( as I suspect ) to the intended marriage between John of Gaunt and Blanche of Lancaster , which took place in 1359 , it will follow that the Poem of Palamon and Arcite must have been composed after that period . Ver . 1932 ...
184 psl.
... Poems had found this word in this sense in his copy of Chaucer , he would not , I apprehend , have looked any further for an explanation of it in The Dance , by Dunbar , St. 2. v . 10. p . 27 . Ver . 2677. Whiche a miracle ] It is ...
... Poems had found this word in this sense in his copy of Chaucer , he would not , I apprehend , have looked any further for an explanation of it in The Dance , by Dunbar , St. 2. v . 10. p . 27 . Ver . 2677. Whiche a miracle ] It is ...
190 psl.
... poem , that Johannes Secundus has celebrated , 1. ii . Eleg . xv . as he appears to have written her Epitaph and a Nænia upon her death . V. Lib . Funer - inter Opp . Secund . In the new Edit . of Les Bibliotheques Françoises , the Poem ...
... poem , that Johannes Secundus has celebrated , 1. ii . Eleg . xv . as he appears to have written her Epitaph and a Nænia upon her death . V. Lib . Funer - inter Opp . Secund . In the new Edit . of Les Bibliotheques Françoises , the Poem ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer To which are Added an Essay Upon ..., 4 tomas Geoffrey Chaucer Visos knygos peržiūra - 1775 |
The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer With an Essay on His Language and ..., 4 tomas Geoffrey Chaucer Visos knygos peržiūra - 1830 |
The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer With an Essay on His Language and ..., 4 tomas Geoffrey Chaucer Visos knygos peržiūra - 1830 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
accidie ayenst best Mss Boccace body Boethius boke called Cange CANTERBURY TALES catel certes Chaucer cleped cometh confession contrition Dæmons dede dedly sinne delit deth devil Discourse &c divel doth drede Du Cange Edit Editt foule French Froissart Gesta Romanorum Gloss Goddes goodnesse gret Harl hath herte heven hire holy chirche jeu parti kepe lecherie litel Lord Jesu Crist maketh maner misericorde moche owen P. P. fol passage peine peine of helle penance peple poem preest quod reson saith sayd sayth Seint Seint Augustine Seint Poule shal shew shrive shul shuld signifies somtime sone sorwe sothly soule speke spices story suffre suppose swere swiche Syntipas tale thee ther Theseida thilke thinges thise thou shalt thridde thurgh translated understond venial sinne veray verse vertue werkes whan wicked withouten wold woman word yeve
Populiarios ištraukos
95 psl. - ... the more, al be he sodenly caught with drinke, it is no dedly sinne, but venial. The second spice of glotonie is, that the spirit of a man wexeth all trouble for dronkennesse, and bereveth a man the discretion of his wit. The thridde spice of glotonie is, whan a man devoureth his mete, and hath not rightful maner of eting. The fourthe is, whan thurgh the gret abundance of his mete, the humours in his body ben distempered. The fifthe is, foryetfulnesse by to moche drinking, for which sometime...
325 psl. - Ne cures si quis tacito sermone loquatur ; Conscius ipse sibi de se putat omnia dici.
130 psl. - Crist, of whom procedeth al wit and al goodnesse. / And if ther be any thyng that displese hem, I preye hem also that they arrette it to the defaute of myn unkonnynge and nat to my wyl, that wolde ful fayn have seyd bettre if I hadde had konnynge.
94 psl. - ... and non almesse : certes, he leseth foule his good, that ne seketh with the yefte of his good nothing but sinne. He is like to an hors that seketh rather to drink drovy or troubled water, than for to drink water of the clere well. And for as moche as they yeven ther as they shuld nat yeven, to hem apperteineth thilke malison, that Crist shal yeve at the day of dome to hem that shul be dampned.
333 psl. - Thus have we traced the Alliterative Measure so low as the sixteenth century. It is remarkable that all such poets as used this kind of metre, retained along with it many peculiar Saxon idioms, particularly such as were appropriated to poetry : this deserves the attention of those who are desirous to recover the laws of the ancient Saxon Poesy, usually given up as inexplicable : I am of opinion that they will find what they seek in the Metre of Pierce Plowman.5 i Jest.
147 psl. - L'Histoire des Trois Maries,' it seems to signify some passage in the conclusion of the mass, Acad. des Ins., t. xiii. p. 521 ' Moult aise sui quant audio Le prestre dire, In principio, Car la messe si est finee.
211 psl. - Were I in my castle of Bungey " Upon the river of Waveney, " I would ne care for the King of Cockeney.
123 psl. - ... and namely in sustenance of mannes food. And take kepe that a man hath nede of thise thinges generally, he hath nede of food, of clothing, and of herberow, he hath nede of charitable conseilling and visiting in prison and in maladie, and sepulture of his ded body.
3 psl. - I wol you tell a litel tale in prose, To knitte up all this feste, and make an ende: And Jesu for his grace wit me sende To shewen you the way in this viage Of thilke parfit glorious pilgrimage, VOL.
248 psl. - Mr Speght probably did not foresee that posterity would be as much obliged to him for a little of this ' fabulous matter ' concerning ' Wade and his bote,' as for the gravest of his annotations.