Chaucer, the Critical Heritage: 1385-1837Derek Brewer Routledge & K. Paul, 1978 - 342 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 30
Seite 93
... Italy Petrarch , so all England venerates Chaucer as the one who before any one else gave beauty to his native tongue . In the second he compares him to Homer and Virgil , and says that while happy ages gave birth to these two , it was ...
... Italy Petrarch , so all England venerates Chaucer as the one who before any one else gave beauty to his native tongue . In the second he compares him to Homer and Virgil , and says that while happy ages gave birth to these two , it was ...
Seite 246
... Italian writer has degenerated into any thing mean and vulgar , and he never suspends his narrative with idle and ... Italy in the fourteenth century , what is com- monly called taste had made a much greater progress in the latter ...
... Italian writer has degenerated into any thing mean and vulgar , and he never suspends his narrative with idle and ... Italy in the fourteenth century , what is com- monly called taste had made a much greater progress in the latter ...
Seite 328
... Italy in a subsequent age , that Ariosto apprehended simi- lar objections to his ribaldry , as will appear from the ... Italian , especially in his serious tales , has the advantage . Pro- lixity , a fault common to all our old poets ...
... Italy in a subsequent age , that Ariosto apprehended simi- lar objections to his ribaldry , as will appear from the ... Italian , especially in his serious tales , has the advantage . Pro- lixity , a fault common to all our old poets ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THE PRINCIPAL EDITIONS OF CHAucers works UP TO 1933 | 33 |
CONTENTS | 34 |
Urheberrecht | |
51 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ancient appear beauty blackletter Boccace boke Cambridge Canterbury Canterbury Tales century character Chau College comic Creseide criticism Decasyllables doth Dryden edition educated English poet Ennius euery excellent extract fame fancy fiction French fynde Gabriel Harvey Geffrey Chaucer genius Geoffrey Chaucer Gothic Gower hath haue honour House of Fame humour imitate Iohn John John Lydgate Knight Knight's Tale language Latin learned literary literature loue Lydgate makyng manners matter metre mind moral nature Neoclassical neuer noble Ovid Oxford Petrarch poem poet poetical poetry praise Prologue reader Romantic rude sayd Shakespeare shal shew Speght Spenser St John's College story style syllables taste ther thing Thomas thou thought Thynne tion tongue translated Troilus Troilus and Criseyde tyme Urry verse versification Virgil vnto vpon Wife of Bath wolde words writers wrote þat þis