Browse Items (15542 total)

Simpson, Louis, ed.   London: Macmillan, 1968.
Textbook introduction to appreciating and analyzing poetry, with a chronological anthology of English and American verse which includes excerpts from GP: 1.1-34 (opening), 79-100 (Squire), 165-207 (Monk), and 445-76, (Wife of Bath). Expanded versions…

Kennedy, X. J., ed.   Boston: Little, Brown, and Co., 1966.
A textbook designed for reading and analyzing poetry in the college classroom, with discussions of prosody, poetic devices, and genres; study questions; and an anthology of illustrative poems, including Chaucer's Purse in Middle English (p. 292) with…

Bowers, John M.   Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 2012.
Places the "Gawain"-poet "within the context of Richard II's court and its numerous intrigues" (ix), with chapters on each of his poems (including "Saint Erkenwald"); a life; "A Survey of Sources and Influences"; and a chronology, glossary of…

Phillips, Helen.   New York : St. Martin's Press, 2000.
Discusses all of the Tales in Ellesmere order, surveying past and current critical approaches. Emphasizes the diversity of CT, discusses the narrative voice, and places the work in historical, political, and economic contexts. Concludes that Chaucer…

Schilling, Arnold.   [Jay Ruud, ed.] Papers on the "Canterbury Tales": From the 1989 NEH Chaucer Institute, Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota ([Aberdeen, S.D.: Northern State University, 1989), pp. 13-23.
Introductory comments on late-medieval musical notation, melody and harmony, rhythm and meter, instruments, and forms, with notes for an accompanying tape recording.

Breeze, Andrew.   Chaucer Review 35: 112-14, 2000.
Used twice in Chaucer (1.391 and 1.3213), Middle English "falding" (like Welsh "ffaling") derives from Irish "fallaing."

Thomas, Paul R.   Encyclia 59 (1985, for 1982): 45-52
Chaucer's learned audience would have seen great irony in Daun Russell's allusion to the cock in Nigel de Longchamps's "Speculum stultorum": that cock, unlike Chauntecleer, had the intelligence to refuse to crow. The textual Chauntecleer is…

Rea, John A.   Philological Quarterly 46 (1967): 128-30.
Offers the "tempting hypothesis" that Adenet le Roi's "Berte aud Grans Pies" is a source of the "coincidence of . . . three motifs" in GP ("pilgrimage, spring, framing device"); also observes several "interesting verbal similarities" between the two.

Dove, Jonathan, composer.   London: Edition Peters, 2015.
Item not seen. WorldCat records indicate that this facsimile of Dove's musical score includes a libretto by Alasdair Middleton based on ShT, and Italian singing translation by Adam Pollock. Also published as the third part of Dove's trilogy:…

Brown, Peter.   Paul Strohm and Thomas J. Heffernan, eds. Studies in the Age of Chaucer, Proceedings, No. 1, 1984 (Knoxville, Tenn.: New Chaucer Society, 1985), pp. 231-43.
Three medieval optical authorities possibly known by Chaucer--Alhazen, Witelo, and Bartholomew--provide parallels for the visual deceptions at the end of MerT, which reflect the medieval tradition of "perspectiva."

Ikegami, Tadahiro.   Hisao Tsuru, ed. Fiction and Truth: Essays on Fourteenth-Century English Literature (Tokyo: Kirihara Shoten, 2000), pp. 47-60.
Examines how Chaucer creates his own world of "fabliaux" based on the French tradition, focusing on The Reeve's Tale.

Goodall, Peter.   AUMLA 57 (1982): 5-23
Discusses the meaning of "fabliau" and comments on Chaucer's influence on later development of the genre in prose and verse.

Khalaf, Omar.   N&Q 256 (2011): 487-90.
The poem's use of "rare variants" such as "peregal," which appears in Chaucer's TC (5.840) and in Lydgate's "Reson and Sensuallyte" (ll. 1738, 4384), exemplifies its "rather refined" language.

Edwards, A. S. G.   Notes and Queries 234 (1989): 307-8.
Notice of an extract from Lydgate's "Troy Book," 2.1849-56, on folio 1, British Library MS Royal 18 C.II, a copy of Chaucer 's CT.

Putter, Ad.   Notes and Queries 264 (2019): 359-61.
Identifies and gives codicological information about Exchequer Records of the King's Remembrancer in The National Archives at Kew, E 163/22/2/24, a portion of Jan van Boendale's Dutch translation of Albertanus of Brescia's "Liber consolationis et…

Boffey, Julia, and A. S. G. Edwards.   Archiv für das Studium der Neueren Sprachen und Literaturen 238: 327-30, 2001.
A three-stanza poem in praise of the Virgin Mary--from a single leaf inserted after Lydgate's Life of Our Lady in Bodleian Library MS Bodley 120--alludes to or echoes SqT (5.347) and TC (5.1670).

Mertz, J. B.   Blake: An Illustrated Quarterly 32.3 (1998-1999): 73-74.
Records a copy (the second known) of William Blake's 1809 Chaucer "Prospectus," pasted into the flyleaf of Francis Douce's copy of Tyrwhitt's edition of CT, now in the Bodleian Library. Pasted opposite is a prospectus for Robert Hartley Cromek's…

Lerer, Seth.   Notes and Queries 230 (1985): 305-306.
One of the "scribbles" appearing in the margins of Mel in the fifteenth-century MS Add. 35286 involves the proverbial "Had-I-wist" ("vain regret").

Rude, Donald W.   American Notes and Queries 23 (1985): 129-30.
A verse letter in "Female Tatler", no. 70, mentions "Sir Jeffrey Chaucer" and alludes implicitly to TC and Pandarus's offer of procurement.

Singh, Devani.   Notes and Queries 266.1 (2021): 56-59.
Inscribed in Durham Palace Green Library, Bamburgh Select. 8, a copy of the "c. 1550 Thynne edition of Chaucer’s Workes," this epitaph stands apart from the three Latin texts heretofore known. One of its signatories may be identified as the “Edmund…

Evans, Gareth Lloyd.   Neophilologus 100 (2016): 335-44.
Argues that "postmodern literary experiments tend to enact, and embody, an unwitting return to medieval modes of textuality," observing how PF, CT as a whole, individual tales, and the multiplicity of variant manuscripts "actively resist a sense of…

Bjelica, Nevenka.   Filoloski Pregled (1977): 95-113.
Tabulates and analyzes analytic (more/most) and synthetic (-er/-est) forms of comparatives and superlatives in Chaucer's prose works (Bo, Astr, Mel, ParsT), correlating them with Old English and French derivations of the root words.

Nicholson, Peter.   English Language Notes 17.2 (1979-80): 93-98.
Archer Taylor's account, in "Sources and Analogues," of the analogues to FrT is incomplete and misleading. Exempla from two fourteenth-century English manuscript collections show that it is possible to be much more precise about Chaucer's…

Topliff, Delores E.   Journal of English Linguistics 4 (1970): 78-89.
Tabulates and analyzes the "positive, comparative, and superlative adjectives in Chaucer's works," challenging the notions that in Middle English only monosyllabic adjectives that end in a consonant are inflected and comparative and superlative…

Fradenburg, Louise O.   New Medieval Literatures 2 (1998): 249-76.
Questions the claim that psychoanalytical medievalism is insufficiently historical. Surveys a selection of articles that may consciously or unconsciously use psychoanalytical principles, including articles that address TC and portions of CT.
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