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By Mouth of Innocentz: The Prioress Vindicated
Kelly, Edward H.
Papers on Language and Literature 5 (1969): 362-74.
Reads the tone and details of PrT as consistent with the characterization of the Prioress established in GP. A "ful" large woman fixated on immaturity and smallness, the Prioress admires motherhood and empathizes with the innocence of the clergeon,…
Truth and Illusion in 'The Franklin's Tale'
Kearney, A. M.
Essays in Criticism 19 (1969): 245-53.
Argues that tensions within FranT indicate that Chaucer was subtly reinforcing the notion that male sovereignty in marriage is, realistically, advisable when combined with mutual trust and cooperation between the partners.
Chaucer's Major Tales
Hoy, Michael, and Michael Stevens.
London: Norton Bailey, 1969.
Comprises seven essays (three by Stevens; four by Hoy) that discuss eight portions of CT (GP, KnT, PrT and ClT, CYPT, FranT, PardPT, NPT), with brief notes, bibliography, and an index. Recurrent concern with unity, narrative skill, aesthetic order…
General Prologue [to] the Canterbury Tales
Hodgson, Phyllis, ed.
London: Athlone, 1969.
Textbook edition of GP with end-of-text notes, glossary, and dictionary of proper names, accompanied by an Introduction that addresses the role of GP in CT, as well as its art and "Inheritance." Also includes several appendixes: "The Poet and His…
Style as Meaning in the 'Book of the Duchess'
Gardner, John.
Language and Style 2 (1969): 143-71.
Explores how and in what ways the "psychological realism" of BD is established and reinforced by the verbal and structural repetitions of the poem. Considers the nature of the dream, the view of love, and the interaction of the narrator and the…
A Sourcebook in the History of English
Farnham, Anthony E.
New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1969.
Designed as a textbook for study of the history of the English language; includes 24 samples of English prose and poetry, with facing-page translations and brief intoductions. Two selections from Chaucer's works: ABC (pp. 63-75) and Bo 1.prose 6…
Chaucer and the 'Franklin's Tale'
Donovan, Mortimer J.
Mortimer J. Donovan. The Breton Lay: A Guide to Varieties (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1969), pp. 173-83.
Describes the features of FranT that affiliate it with the genre of the Breton lay (Breton lai) and those that make Chaucer's work unique. Considers the sources of FranT, and explore its aesthetic success as an "imitation" of the genre, including…
Imagery in the 'Knight's Tale' and the 'Miller's Tale'
Dean, Christopher.
Mediaeval Studies 31 (1969): 149-63.
Summarizes various problems in dealing with Chaucer's imagery, and examines the imagery in KnT and MilT. In both tales, images tend to "appear in clusters" and they are oftentimes linked in "iterative" patterns to reinforce theme. Considers animal…
The Major Poets: English and American. 2nd edition
Coffin, Charles M., and Gerrit Hubbard Roselofs, eds.
New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1969.
Begins with a selection from Chaucer (pp. [i], 1-23) which includes Truth, Gent, GP 1-34 and 1.118-62 (Prioress), and NPT, accompanied by notes and glosses, and preceded by advice on Chaucer's English. Originally edited by Coffin in 1954.
Sovereignty and Old Wife
Cary, Meredith.
Papers on Language and Literature 5 (1969): 375-88.
Compares WBT with its analogues to show that Chaucer's alterations of the plot "redefine such central concepts as 'honor' and 'sovereignty' in feminine terms," consistent with the gender of its teller. By emphasizing moral precept instead of…
The Works, 1532: With Supplementary Material from the Editions of 1542, 1561, 1598, and 1602
Brewer, D. S., intro.
London: Scolar, 1969.
Facsimile edition of William Thynne's 1532 edition of Chaucer's "Works," accompanied by selected additional facsimile materials from the editions that followed (by John Stow and Thomas Speght), including apocryphal materials, hard-word lists,…
Chaucer's Contemporary
Bennett, J. A. W.
S. S. Hussey, ed. Piers Plowman: Critical Approaches (London: Methuen, 1969), pp. 310-24 and 352-53.
Explores the affinities and "common sympathies" between William Langland and Chaucer, including their "Englishness," their views of religion and virtue, their shared sense of human variety, and the possibility that Chaucer may have read "Piers…
An Annotated Chaucer Bibliography, 2012
Amsel, Stephanie, and Mark Allen.
SAC 36 (2014): 359-421.
Continuation of SAC annual annotated bibliography (since 1975); based on contributions from an international bibliographic team, independent research, and MLA Bibliography listings. 229 items, plus listing of reviews for 43 books. Includes an author…
Chaucer's Gentils in their Age, [Parts1-3]
Hira, Toshinori.
Bulletin of the Faculty of Liberal Arts, Nagasaki University, Humanities 26.2 (1986): 43-57; 27.2 (1987): 1-17; 28.2 (1988): 1-15.
Part 1 describes the Canterbury pilgrims that qualify as "gentils" by birth, education, or accomplishment (Knight, Prioress, Monk, Squire, Franklin, Merchant, Guildsmen, Sergeant of Law, Physician, Parson, and Nun's Priest), explaining details of…
Chaucer's Meagre Reference to the Variable World, Parts I-IV
Hira, Toshinori.
Bulletin of the Faculty of Arts, Humanities (Nagasaki University) 3 (1963); 104-12; 4 (1964): 22-42; 10 (1969): 39-50; 10 (1969): 39-50.
Commentary on social, political, ecclesiastical, and religious aspects of CT, with attention to particular pilgrims. Limited availability at http://hdl.handle.net/10069/9502; http://hdl.handle.net/10069/9506; http://hdl/handle.net/10069/9570;…
Chaucer's Failure with Women: The Inadequacy of Criseyde
Corrigan, Matthew.
Western Humanities Review 23 (1969): 107-20.
Describes Chaucer's depictions of Criseyde and the Wife of Bath as "marred" by unconscious "psychic blinders" of his male-dominated age, each lacking a "life all her own." Alison is one of Chaucer's "great comic actors," but not psychically a woman,…
Geoffrey Chaucer's English (I)
Takesue, Masataro.
Bulletin of the Faculty of Education, Nagasaki University 17 (1968): 1-15.
Grammatical description of Chaucer's nouns, with examples. In Japanese.
Geoffrey Chaucer's English (II)
Takesue, Masataro.
Bulletin of the Faculty of Education, Nagasaki University 18 (1969): 1-14.
Grammatical description of Chaucer's pronouns, with examples. In Japanese.
Geoffrey Chaucer's English (III)
Takesue, Masataro.
Bulletin of the Faculty of Education, Nagasaki University 19 (1970): 1-12.
Grammatical description of Chaucer's articles, adjectives, and numerals, with examples. In Japanese.
Geoffrey Chaucer's English (IV)
Takesue, Masataro.
Bulletin of the Faculty of Education, Nagasaki University 20 (1971): 1-10.
Grammatical description of Chaucer's infinitives and participles, with examples. In Japanese.
[The Episode of Dante's Count Ugolino in Chaucer]
Rokutanda, Osamu.
Studi Italici 35 (1986): 1-14.
In Japanese; accessible online at CiNii Articles [http://ci.nii.ac.jp/]. Abstract in Italian included in the back matter of the volume (p. 1), under the title "L'Episodio Dantesco di Conte Ugolion in Chaucer."
[The Meeting of Chaucer and Italian Literature]
Rokutanda, Osamu.
Studi Italici 17 (1969): 63-77.
In Japanese; accessible online at CiNii Articles [http://ci.nii.ac.jp/]. Abstract in Italian included in the back matter of the volume (pp. 3-4), under the title "L'Incontro del Chaucer e la Letteratura Italiana."
'To Doon Yow Ese': A Study of the Host in the 'General Prologue' of the Canterbury Tales'
Keen, William.
Topic 17 (1969): 5-18.
Considers the diction and details of the description of the Host, Harry Bailly, in GP, especially as they are developed in the dramatic action of GP in anticipation of the Host's comic slips later in CT. Discusses his merriness; his concern with…
The Structure of 'The Book of the Duchess'
Eldredge, Laurence.
Revue de l'Université de Ottawa 39 (1969): 132-51.
Observes evidence of "ring composition" in BD, especially in parallels among the Dreamer, Alcyone, and the Black Knight, and a centralizing focus on the "conflict between Fortune and Nature." Also considers love, the he(a)rt-hunting motif, and the…
Chaucer's 'Sweete Preest'
Watkins, Charles A.
ELH 36 (1969): 455-69.
Identifies physiognomic details in NPP and NPE that characterize the Nun's Priest as a "healthy and handsome young cleric, of temperate disposition." He "has the virtues of the widow" of NPT- (good health and moral rectitude) which counterpoint the…
