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The Norman Blake Editions of The Canterbury Tales icon

The Norman Blake Editions of The Canterbury Tales

20 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 5

Byhold the myrie talkynge of the Hoost to Chaucer

Here the hoost stynteth Chaucer of his tale of Thopas , and biddeth hym , telle another tale Namoore of this , for goddes dignytee Quod oure hoost for thow makest me

Hoost to Chaucer Whan seyd was al this miracle , euery man As sobre was , that wonder was to se Til that oure hoost Iapen to bigan And thanne at erst he looked vp on me .s. Chaucer And

hoost. to Chaucer WHan seyd was al this myracle , euery man As sobre was , that wonder was to se Til that oure hoost iapen to bigan And thanne at erst he looked vp on me .i. Chaucer And

de Chaucer Grisilde is deed , and eek hir pacience And bothe atones , buryed in Ytaille For which I crie , in open audience No wedded man , so hardy be tassaille His wyues pacience , in hope to

Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership icon

Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership

21 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 5

tot cumuata modisHec sibi marmoreo scribentur sepulchro¶Hee maneat laudis sarcina sum sueGalfridus Chaucer rates. et fam poesiMaterne. ac sacra sum tumulatus humoPost obitum Caxton voluit te viuere cum¶Willelmi. Chaucer clare poeta tujNam tua non solum compressit opuscula formisHas quo{que} {sed}

20881.3S10044099836280540The remors of conscyence. Here begynneth certayne demonstracyons by our lorde to all synfull persones with the remors of mannes conscynce to the regarde of the bounte of our lorde.Lichfield, William, d. 1448.7 600dpi TIFF G4 page imagesUniversity of

Epitaphiū Galfridi Chaucer. per poetam laureatū Stephaū surigonū ¶Mediolanensē in decretis licenciatūPyerides muse si possunt numina fleFūdere. diuinas at{que} rigare genasGalfridi vatis chaucer crudelia fata¶Plangite. sit lacrinus abstinuisse nephasUos colu viuēs. at vos celebrate sepultumRddatur merito gracia digna viroGrande decus

depiction of crucifixion6828S106576998422906934hEre endeth the book named the dictes or sayengis of the philosophres enprynted. by me william Caxton at westmestre the yere of our lord .M.CCCC.Lxx vij. Whiche book is late translated out of Frenshe into englyssh. by

5087S108768998444249235The book of fame made by Gefferey Chaucer.Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400.26 600dpi TIFF G4 page imagesUniversity of Michigan, Digital Library Production ServiceAnn Arbor, Michigan2003 January (TCP phase 1)99844424STC (2nd ed.) 5087.Duff 86.GW 6589.9235A18553.0001.001This keyboarded and encoded edition of the

The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse icon

The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse

57 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 5

The Clerk. The Merchant . The Squire . The Franklin . The Doctor. The Pardoner. The Shipman . The Prioress. Chaucer . Monk and Hound . The Nun ' s Priest . The Second Nun . The Canon ' s

myrie talkyng/ of the Hoost/. to Chaucer . WHan seyd was al this myracle / euery man As sobre was / that wonder was to se Til that oure hoost iapen he bigan .i. Chaucer And thanne at erst he

Hoost to Chaucer WHan seyd was al this myrakele euery man As sobere was that wondir was to see Til that oure hoost Iapyn tho [la ter ] be-gan And thanne at erst he lokede vp-on mee .i. Chaucer And

scripti inden tati penes predictis Thoma Chaucer , Johanne et Hamone remanenti predicti Ricardus et Agnes sigilla sua apposuerunt: alteri vero parti hujus scripti indentati penes predictis Ricardo et Agnete remanenti predicti Thomas Chaucer , Johannes , et Hamo sigilla

[ c. 1425 ] This is a fragment of a letter, which from the mention of " master Chaucer " ( Thomas Chaucer , who died in 1434 ) must have been addressed to the first Thomas Stonor . The

British Library Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts icon

British Library Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts

116 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 5

(foliate) pen-flourishing. Canterbury Tales Sir Hans Sloane (b. 1660, d. 1753), baronet, physician and collector. Purchased as part of the Sloane collection from Sloane's executors and incorporated into the newly founded British Museum in 1753. Flourished initial Geoffrey Chaucer England

a miniature of Chaucer, wearing an inkhorn around his neck, clutching a rosary, and pointing at the text. Horizontal catchwords.f. 1* is a parchment flyleaf.f. 1: Added text in a later hand, with the rubric: 'Here begynnth the Book how

429.Bought by the British Museum from B. Quaritch, 9 November 1889 (note on 1st flyleaf verso), using the Bridgewater fund (£12,000 bequeathed in 1829 by Francis Henry Egerton, 8th Earl of Bridgewater (b. 1756, d. 1829). Detail Geoffrey Chaucer England

429.Bought by the British Museum from B. Quaritch, 9 November 1889 (note on 1st flyleaf verso), using the Bridgewater fund (£12,000 bequeathed in 1829 by Francis Henry Egerton, 8th Earl of Bridgewater (b. 1756, d. 1829). Detail Geoffrey Chaucer England

British Literary Manuscripts Online icon

British Literary Manuscripts Online

10 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 5

82 images. Date(s) Author(s) [Geoffrey Chaucer] Collection(s) Part One: Medieval Manuscripts from the Sloane and Additional Manuscripts, Section A Manuscript Number 9832 Source Library British Library, London Description THE LEGENDE of good women, by Geoffrey Chaucer. On paper of the

images. Date(s) Author(s) [Geoffrey Chaucer] Collection(s) Part One: Medieval Manuscripts from the Sloane and Additional Manuscripts, Section A Manuscript Number 10,340 Source Library British Library, London Description BOETRIUS de Consolations Philosophiæ, translated into English by Goffrey Chaucer. On vellum, of

London 95 images. Date(s) Author(s) [Geoffroy Chaucer] Collection(s) Part One: Medieval Manuscripts from the Sloane and Additional Manuscripts, Section A Manuscript Number 25,718 Source Library British Library, London Description THE Canterbury Tales of Geoffroy Chaucer. Imperfect; containing portions only of

Manuscripts, Section A 12,044 British Library, London 117 images. Date(s) Author(s) [Geoffrey Chaucer] Collection(s) Part One: Medieval Manuscripts from the Sloane and Additional Manuscripts, Section A Manuscript Number 12,044 Source Library British Library, London Description CHAUCER's Poem of Troylus and

Manuscripts, Section A 12524 British Library, London 31 images. Date(s) Author(s) [Geoffrey Chaucer, Gilbert Banester] Collection(s) Part One: Medieval Manuscripts from the Sloane and Additional Manuscripts, Section A Manuscript Number 12524 Source Library British Library, London Description CHAUCER'S Legends of

TEAMS Middle English Texts Series icon

TEAMS Middle English Texts Series

531 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 5

The poems of “Ch” have been edited by Wimsatt, Chaucer and the Poems of “Ch”; for Chaucer’s 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

The Auchinleck Manuscript icon

The Auchinleck Manuscript

3 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 3

Trübner, 1879; reprinted 1962): 498-499. R. P. Wülcker, Altenglisches Lesebuch (Halle: Niemeyer, 1874-80). A. J. Ellis, On Early English Pronunciation, Chaucer Society, Second Series, 4 (London: Trübner, 1869): 449. T. Wright, The Political Songs of England, Camden Society, 6 (London:

of the text). D. B. Sands, Middle English Verse Romances (Exeter: Exeter University Press, 1986). B. Ford, The Age of Chaucer (With an Anothology of Medieval Poems) (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1969). (Normalised text based on Sisam). W. H. French and C.

1810): 3.3-153. F. J. Furnivall, E. Brock and W. A. Clouston, Originals and Analogues of Some of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, Chaucer Society, Second Series, 7, 10, 15, 20, 22 (London: Trübner, 1872-87): 448-450. Index 3187. The Seven Sages of Rome

Middle English Grammar Corpus icon

Middle English Grammar Corpus

1 result from this resource . Displaying 1 to 1

Oxford, Bodleian Library, Rawlinson Poet. 141 Text: Chaucer, Canterbury Tales Tranche 1 fol. 58rThis alison . answerd who is there . That knokketh so . j warant hit a thefe . Why nay q d he god wote my swete

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