The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: The house of fame:The legend of good women: The treatise on the astrolabe: with an account of the sources of the Canterbury tales.[v. 4] The Canterbury tales: textClarendon Press, 1894 |
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Resultats 1 - 5 de 75.
Pàgina xxvii
... story of Canace was expressly rejected . Combining our information , and rearranging it , we see that his intention ... stories of Medea and Hypsipyle under one narrative . Putting aside Alcestis , whose Legend was to come last , the ...
... story of Canace was expressly rejected . Combining our information , and rearranging it , we see that his intention ... stories of Medea and Hypsipyle under one narrative . Putting aside Alcestis , whose Legend was to come last , the ...
Pàgina xxix
... stories from the much larger collection in Boccaccio . At the same time it is remarkable that neither Boccaccio ( in the above work ) nor Ovid gives the story of Alcestis , and it is not quite certain whence Chaucer obtained it . It is ...
... stories from the much larger collection in Boccaccio . At the same time it is remarkable that neither Boccaccio ( in the above work ) nor Ovid gives the story of Alcestis , and it is not quite certain whence Chaucer obtained it . It is ...
Pàgina xxx
... story was not aware that Belides is a plural substantive , being the collective name of the fifty daughters of Danaus , who are here rolled into one in order to be transformed into a single daisy ; and all because the words bellis and ...
... story was not aware that Belides is a plural substantive , being the collective name of the fifty daughters of Danaus , who are here rolled into one in order to be transformed into a single daisy ; and all because the words bellis and ...
Pàgina xxxii
... story of a woman named Herés- ' une pucelle [ qui ] ama tant son mari ' - whose tears , shed for the loss of her husband Cephey , were turned by Jupiter into daisies as they fell upon the green turf . There they were discovered , one ...
... story of a woman named Herés- ' une pucelle [ qui ] ama tant son mari ' - whose tears , shed for the loss of her husband Cephey , were turned by Jupiter into daisies as they fell upon the green turf . There they were discovered , one ...
Pàgina xxxiv
... story , and the name of Agatho ( of whom he probably knew nothing more than the name ) served his turn as well as another . His easy way of citing authors is probably , at times , humorously assumed ; and such may be the explana- tion ...
... story , and the name of Agatho ( of whom he probably knew nothing more than the name ) served his turn as well as another . His easy way of citing authors is probably , at times , humorously assumed ; and such may be the explana- tion ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: The house of fame: The legend of ... Geoffrey Chaucer Visualització completa - 1900 |
The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: The house of fame. The legend of ... Geoffrey Chaucer Visualització completa - 1900 |
The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: The house of fame:The legend of good ... Geoffrey Chaucer Visualització completa - 1900 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
Ægyptus Æneid Alcestis altitude Amorosa Visione anoon Aries assendent Astrolabe Balade Boccaccio Bodleian Library Boethius bordure Canterbury Tales cercle Chaucer cleped conclusioun Dante declaracioun deeth degree Demophon Dido doon doun edition Eneas equinoxial flour goon Gower grete hath Heroides herte hous House of Fame Hypsipyle Iasoun king latitude Legend lines longitude lyne magyk maner Medea meridional mone night oghte omit orisonte Ovid passage planete poem prikke Prologue quene quod rede rest Rete rewle rime saugh seyde seyn shal shew signes sone sonne sterre story swich Tale thanne thee ther Theseus thilke thing thise thogh thou thy figure thyn Astrolabie trewe Troilus tyme Umbra up-on werk whan whyl wolde word wroot yere zodiac
Passatges populars
Pàgina 309 - Pompey (the son of Pompey the Great) only for her beauty, she began to have good hope that she might more easily win Antonius. For Caesar and Pompey knew her when she was but a young thing, and knew not then what the world meant: but now she went to Antonius at the age when a woman's beauty is at the prime, and she also of best judgment.
Pàgina 304 - Teseide, i. 2) he speaks of it as ' — una storia antica, Tanto negli anni riposta e nascosa, Che Latino autor non par ne dica, Per quel ch'io senta, in libro alcuna cosa.
Pàgina 402 - Rosalynde, Euphues Golden Legacie, found after his death in his Cell at Silexedra, bequeathed to Philautus sonnes noursed up with their father in England, Fetcht from the Canaries by TL, gent., Imprinted by T.
Pàgina 65 - And to hem yive I feyth and ful credence, And in myn herte have hem in reverence So hertely, that ther is game noon That fro my bokes maketh me to goon...
Pàgina 68 - Of makynge ropen *, and lad awey the corn ; And I come after, glenyng here and there, And am ful glad yf I may fynde an ere Of any goodly word that ye han left. And thogh it happen me rehercen eft That ye han in your fresshe songes sayd, Forbereth me, and beth not evil apayd5, Syn that ye see I do yt in the honour Of love, and eke in service of the flour, Whom that I serve as I have wit or myght.
Pàgina 69 - And maketh it soune after his fyngerynge, Ryght so mowe ye oute of myn herte bringe Swich vois, ryght as yow lyst, to laughe or pleyne. Be ye my gide and lady sovereyne!
Pàgina 252 - Muses! O high genius! now vouchsafe Your aid. O mind! that all I saw hast kept Safe in a written record, here thy worth And eminent endowments come to proof. 1 thus began : " Bard ! thou who art my guide, Consider well, if virtue be in me Sufficient, ere to this high enterprise Thou trust me. Thou hast told that Silvius' sire,1 Yet clothed in corruptible flesh, among The immortal tribes had entrance, and was there Sensibly present.
Pàgina 33 - This litel laste book thou gye! Nat that I wilne, for maistrye, Here art poetical be shewed; But, for the rym is light and lewed, Yit make hit sumwhat agreable, Though som vers faile in a sillable; And that I do no diligence To shewe craft, but o sentence.
Pàgina 311 - Bruce (viii. 351, ix. 263, 269, xvii. 104, 575), with the sense 'fled in different directions,' or ' fled away.' Cf. ' the wlcne to-gaS,' the clouds part asunder; Morris, Spec. of Eng. pt. I. p. 7, 1. 169. And again, ' thagh the fourme of brede to-go,' though the form of bread disappear ; Shoreham's Poems, p. 29. That best go mighte, each in the way he could best go ; each made the best of his way to a safe place.
Pàgina lxix - Entertainments, where a translation which I have now before me has the words — ' instead of putting water into the basin, he [the barber] took a very handsome astrolabe out of his case, and went very gravely out of my room to the middle of the yard, to take the height of the sun'; on which passage Mr. Lane has a note (chap. v. note 57) which Mr. Brae quotes at length in his edition. There is also at least one version of a treatise in Greek, entitled vtp\ TTJj TOV aorpoX1ijSou xpqo-ewt, by Johannes...