In Search of Chaucer, Volume 10 |
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Page 41
... kind or use of reading the kind that might serve as an appropriate bridge to that other country , to the vision which was the poem's raison d'ĂȘtre . From this point of view , the relation , taken generally , is one of cause and effect ...
... kind or use of reading the kind that might serve as an appropriate bridge to that other country , to the vision which was the poem's raison d'ĂȘtre . From this point of view , the relation , taken generally , is one of cause and effect ...
Page 97
... kind : it would be a tragic frieze . " What ! will the line stretch out to the crack of doom ? " Could any one honestly endure to see it , or hear it , through ? Why collect and distil records of human suffering merely to en- force the ...
... kind : it would be a tragic frieze . " What ! will the line stretch out to the crack of doom ? " Could any one honestly endure to see it , or hear it , through ? Why collect and distil records of human suffering merely to en- force the ...
Page 98
... kind of frame or motivating scheme . It seems very unlikely that he would have begun such a compilation as this without devising a plausible means of getting it under way , some kind of machinery to start the procession of the ...
... kind of frame or motivating scheme . It seems very unlikely that he would have begun such a compilation as this without devising a plausible means of getting it under way , some kind of machinery to start the procession of the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abraham Alceste allas allusions Arcite artistic audience authority BERTRAND H book and dream Canterbury Canterbury Tales character Chaucer Clerk Clerk's Tale contemporaries context course courtly criticism Dido doubt dramatic dream-visions Duchess earthly effect fact figure fynde Geoffrey Chaucer give Grisilde Grisilde's hath hevene hire House of Fame human ideal imagination ironic irony kind Kittredge Knight's Tale lady Legend literary lord love-vision meaning mediaeval ment Merchant mind Monk Monk's Tale moral myghte narrative narrator natural naturalistic never Nun's Nun's Priest's Tale observe Pandarus Pardoner Pardoner's Parliament of Fowls perhaps personification pilgrims poem poet poet's poetry present Prologue Queen question reading relation says scene Scipio seems sense seyde shal story suppose symbolic Tatlock tell ther things thought thyng tion Troilus and Criseyde truth vision Walter whan whole wife Wife of Bath women word writing wrote