"The Sins of Madame Eglentyne", and Other Essays on ChaucerUniversity of Delaware Press, 1995 - Всего страниц: 201 While each essay can stand alone in that Rex has approached Madame Eglentyne and her tale with a number of different considerations in mind, together they contribute to our understanding of this Canterbury pilgrim in important ways. Scholars lament the fact that Chaucer refrains from stating opinions - that he seems to have no axes to grind, never chooses sides, and always defers to the authority of others. In the Prioress's Tale, however, Chaucer reveals more of his moral thought than in any of his other works, for in this tale he juxtaposes the theme of martyrdom and vengeance with Christ's crucifixion and the concept of charity. |
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Стр. 81
... called the Rose . The latter had been sold by William Spence to Henry Polsted in 1537 under the description of " all that his Tenement and gardens sometyme called The Rose , set and being vpon the Stewes banke . . . . That is to saye ...
... called the Rose . The latter had been sold by William Spence to Henry Polsted in 1537 under the description of " all that his Tenement and gardens sometyme called The Rose , set and being vpon the Stewes banke . . . . That is to saye ...
Стр. 84
... called ' le Barge , ' and extending from the Thames to a lane called ' Maydenlane . " " 32 The Survey of London erroneously states that the Trig property was the Great Pike Gar- den , when in fact it was the Rose.33 Whether or not St ...
... called ' le Barge , ' and extending from the Thames to a lane called ' Maydenlane . " " 32 The Survey of London erroneously states that the Trig property was the Great Pike Gar- den , when in fact it was the Rose.33 Whether or not St ...
Стр. 119
... called " master " [ i.e. , " madame " ] will not be joined to God : the evil abbess " haldis þat name for pride and vanite , and takes no heede þat sho moste geue ... a rekeninge of þe saules of hir sisters . " 117 The author of the ...
... called " master " [ i.e. , " madame " ] will not be joined to God : the evil abbess " haldis þat name for pride and vanite , and takes no heede þat sho moste geue ... a rekeninge of þe saules of hir sisters . " 117 The author of the ...
Содержание
Chaucer and the Jews | 13 |
Chaucers Censured Ballads | 27 |
Pastiche as Irony in the Prioresss Prologue and Tale | 34 |
Авторские права | |
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Alice Perrers allusion Ancrene Riwle ballads Bankside Bernard brothels Butrym Cambridge University Press Canterbury Tales century charity Chaucer Review Chaucer's Prioress Chaucerian Christ Christian Cistercian Cited Clarendon Press color concerning conscience Critical Dame diss Dives and Pauper dogs Edition EETS eyes F. J. Furnivall Fifteenth-Century fourteenth fourteenth-century French Friar Furnivall Geoffrey Chaucer grey haue herte holy Institute of Mediaeval irony Jews John Gower John Wyclif Langland Lollard London Madame Eglentyne Manuscripts Mary Mediaeval Studies Medieval England Middle Ages Middle English miracles Mirour de l'Omme monks Notes nuns Orcherd of Syon Oxford Persius Ph.D Philology Piers Plowman Pilgrimage Poetry portrait Prioress Prioress's Tale Prologue punishment reference religious Reprint Richard Richard Rolle Robert rosary Rose Saint Salzburg satiric Sermons singing Skeat Southwark Speculum symbolism synne tenement Thomas Thomas Usk trans Translated Universität Salzburg vair vols William Wyclif Wycliffite Wykeham York þat þei