Bards and Makars: Scottish Language and Literature : Medieval and RenaissanceA. J. Aitken, Matthew P. McDiarmid, Derick S. Thomson |
Contents
Contents | 15 |
Preface page vii | 22 |
Language as Action in Henrysons Testament of Cresseid | 41 |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aeneid Asloan audience Ballatis Bannatyne Bannatyne's bardic Book Cathal cent Central Scots Chaucer Chepman and Myllar Christ Church Clanranald Colla commentary contemporary copied courtly death Denis the Carthusian dialects Douglas Douglas's Drummond early Early Scots Edinburgh edition elegy Eneados English Eurydice evidence ǝnd fables François Villon Gavin Douglas German Habbie Hell Henryson Irish John king language Latin Lindsay lines linguistic literary persona literature MacDonald MacMhuirich Manuscript medieval metrical Middle Scots modern Scots moral Myllar print narrative narrator Older Scots Orpheus Palice of Honour passage perhaps phrase play poem poet poetic poetry Prol Prologue psalm Quhen realisations references reformation Robert Henryson romance satire Satyre Scotland Scottish Gaelic seems sentence Sir Orfeo sixteenth century spelling standard stanza suggest surviving Swiss syntactic Testament of Cresseid Thair theme tradition translation Troilus vernacular verse Villon Virgil vowel William Dunbar word
References to this book
Complete and Full with Numbers: The Narrative Poetry of Robert Henryson John MacQueen No preview available - 2006 |
Complete and Full with Numbers: The Narrative Poetry of Robert Henryson John MacQueen No preview available - 2006 |