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The poems of Ch have been edited by Wimsatt, Chaucer and the Poems of Ch; for Chaucers remark, see his Retraction, line 1086. 6 Strohm, Some Generic Distinctions, similarly concludes that Chaucer understood a tretys to be a tale. .
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
Chaucer was finishing Troilus and Criseyde; and he was ordained a priest in 1397 when Chaucer was in the final phase of The Canterbury Tales. Probably while studying at Oxford in the late 1390s, he made contact with Thomas
Wycliffite Bible, lines 111-12 and note. 4 parfit charitee. For the tradition of sancta rusticitas before Langland and Chaucer, see Jill Mann, Chaucer and Medieval Estates Satire (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973), pp. 68-69, and the references in endnotes 65
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon
Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, rev. ed. (London: Bell, 1875), vol. 6, p. 307. Skeat prints a similar version of this poem from Caxton's edition of Chaucer, as the first one of the "Sayings" (or proverbs) of Chaucer: Whan feyth failleth
a craftsman to use this device if he intended only to follow Chaucer. Moreover, besides signaling that he read Chaucer, he also indicated that he would depart from Chaucer in very significant ways when in the prologue his narrator asks,
if they did not have some perceived cultural, political, ideological, or commercial value. Today Chaucer is valued for what he presumably wrote (enshrined in The Riverside Chaucer) but Chaucer's early scribal and print editors also appear to have prized his
CT: Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales; CVP: Gower, Carmen super multiplici viciorum pestilencia; IPP: Gower, In Praise of Peace; Mac: Macaulay edition; MO: Gower, Mirour de l'Omme; TC: Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde; Thynne: William Thynne, printer, The Works of Geffray Chaucer
The gold dewe dropes of speche and eloquence, Into English tong through his excelence. From John Stow's Workes of Geffrey Chaucer, 1561 (fol. 337v). These seven lines served as an envoy to Chaucer's Parliament of Fowls in both Trinity College,
Fortune, Lenvoy de Chaucer a Scogan, The Complaint of Chaucer to His Purse, Lenvoy de Chaucer a Bukton, Lak of Stedfastnesse, Against Women Unconstant (which some editors are doubtful about ascribing to Chaucer; see The Riverside Chaucer, pp. 636-37). 24
"CH": NOTES Abbreviations: A: Neuchâtel; B: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS lat. 3343; C: Barcelona text; CT: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; LGW: Chaucer, The Legend of Good Women; P: University of Pennsylvania MS French 15. [Ch I; MS #235] Chançon