Imatges de pàgina
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Eneid, the first lines of, quoted, iii. 6.
Eneid, the, imitated, iii. 58.

Æolus, god of wind, iii. 57.

Æson, iii. 133.

Agaton, an unknown writer, iii. 100.

Age grown shorter than she was, iii. 219.
Age, its safety, iii. 377, 379.

Agenor's daughter, iii. 83.

Agraulos, ii. 518.

Ahithophel, ii. 322.

Alanus de Insulis, the "Universal Doctor," ii. 99, 342 ;
iii. 36.

Albertano of Brescia, 249.

Albertano of Brescia, his Consolatione et Consilii, lxxii.

Alcathoë, i. e., Megara, iii. 152.

Alceste, ballad sung to, iii. 88.

Alchemists, their practices, ii. 88, etc.

Alcoran, the, of Mahomet, 180.

Aldine Chaucer, the, x.

Aldiran, the star, ii. 11.

Ale-stake, an, 27.

Alexander, Aristotle's instructions to, ii. 117.
Alexander the Great, and his fortunes, 351.
Alexander's dreams, iii. 34.

Alexandria, 3.

Alexandria, Rome, Troy, and Nineveh, ii. 100.

Algezir, the siege of, 3.

Algous, the inventor of the abacus, ii. 298.

Alhazen, Arabian astronomer, ii. 10.

Alice, the carpenter's wife, serenaded, 126.

Alla in Rome, 205.

Alla, king of Northumberland, 190.

Alla meets Custance in Rome, 207.

Alla mourns for his wife and child, 201.

Alliteration, ii. 134.

Almachius, prefect of Rome, ii. 76.

Almagest, the, of Ptolemy, 426, 432.

Alma redemptoris, 232.

Almsdeeds, ii. 262.

Alnath, the star, ii. 50.

Alphabet, the Old English, v.

Alphonsus of Lincoln, 239.

Ambrose quoted, ii. 137.

Americanism, an, 511.

Amour, William St., iii. 443.

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Amphiaraus, the seer, ii. 370, 430, 677.

Amphion, king of Thebes, ii. 123.

Ancestors, 463.

Anchises, iii. 7.

Andromachus the elder, compounder of the Theriaca

Andromachi, 394.

Andromeda, her dream of Hector, 371.

Anelyda, her complaint, ii. 376.

Angelus ad Virginem, a song, 121.

Anger and its fruit, 497.

Anger described by Augustine, ii. 192.

Anger, remedy against, ii. 209.

Angry folk to be avoided, iii. 321.

Anguishous, contrition should be, ii. 162.

Ann, sister of Dido, iii. 124, 131.

Anne of Bohemia, iii. 99.

Annueler, a priest employed to sing anniversary masses
for the dead, ii. 101.

Annus magnus, cxii.

Antenor, ii. 322.

Antenor and Cryseyde arranged to be exchanged, ii. 564
Antenor taken prisoner, ii. 561.

Antichrist's men, iii. 452.

Anticlaudianus, a work of Alanus de Insulis, iii. 36.

Antigone's song, ii. 457.

Antiochus, and his fall, 350.

Antony, iii. 103.

Apelles, and the sepulchre that he made for Darius, 438

Apelles, the painter, 384.

Apollo, a prayer to, ii. 40.

Apollo invoked, iii. 40.

Apostles, a wolf among, iii. 426.

Apostrophe to the house of Cryseyde, ii. 642.

Apparel, xxix.

Appetite, unmeasurable, ii. 232.

Appius cast into prison, 394.

Appius, the false judge, 389.

April, messenger to May, 167.

Arabian Nights' Entertainments, lxxvi.

Archemorus, ii. 677.

Architecture, the, of the House of Fame, iii. 44.

Arcite and Palamon found on the field of battle, 40.

Arcite delivered through the intercession of Perotheus

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Arcite speaks to Emily before his death, 104.
Arcite, the burial of, 108.

Arcite's fall, 102.

Arcite's triumph, 101.

Argument, cxii.

Argus, iii. 135.

Argyve, the mother of Cryseyde, ii. 587.

Ariadne, iii. 9.

Ariadne and Theseus, iii. 15.

Arion and his cithara, iii. 37.

Aristotle and his philosophy, 12.

Aristotle on sound, iii. 28.

Aristotle's Ethics, iii. 85.

Armenia, ruled by Anelyda, ii. 370.

Arming of the knights at Athens, 94.

Armor of Sir Thopas described, 241.

Armorica, a knight of, ii. 29.

Arnold of Villeneuve, his Rosarium Philosophorum, ii.
116.

Arrangement of the Canterbury Tales, Ivii.

Arrows, five, of Sweet-looking, iii. 241.

Arthur, the king, 452.

Arveragus. of Cairrud, ii. 32.

Ascalaphus turned into an owl, ii. 633.

Associates of the Friar, 10.

Astrolabe, cxiv.

Astrolabe, the, referred to, ii. 361.

Astrological allusions, 360, 362, 577; ii. 3, 11, 50.

Astrological hours, 17.

Astrology, xxiii.

Astrology referred to, 120.

Atalanta, 79.

Athalus Asiaticus, inventor of chess, ii. 306.

Athamas, king of Thebes, ii. 616.

Atlantic Monthly quoted, 131.

Atropos, one of the Fates, ii. 604, 616.

Attalia, 3.

Attila, the great conqueror, 405.

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Attry," anger ii. 198.

Augustine, bishop of Hippo, 375; iii. 144

Augustine describes anger, ii. 192.

Augustine, his directions to monks, 8.

Augustine on avarice, 305.

Augustine on confession, ii. 255.

Augustine on matrimony, ii. 244.

INDEX.

Augustine quoted, ii. 138; iii. 437.

Augustine's De Civitate Dei, referred to, ii. 222.
Augustine's definition of envy, ii. 186.

Augustine's treatise, De Opere Monachorum, iii. 441.
Aurelius, the squire who danced with Dorigen, ii. 37.
Aurora, a metrical version of the Bible, ii. 324.

A varice, ii. 220; iii. 214.

Avarice, a warning against, by the Pardoner, 417.
Avarice, the Pardoner's words on, 396.

Avarice to be avoided, 305.

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Averroes, the Moorish scholar of the twelfth century, 18

Avicenna, Arabian physician, 18.

A vicenna, his Canon Me 1icinæ, 416.

Bacchus, 386; ii. 123.

Backbiting, ii. 188.

Backgammon, raffles, and other forbidaen games, ii. 228
Bacon, the Dunmow flitch of, 428.

Baisieux, Jacques de, his story, La Vescie du Curé, 485.

Ballad to King Richard, xlix.

Barnabo, lord of Mila 1, xliii. 343.

Barons called upon in the Romaunt of the Rose, iii. 410.
Basilisk, the, 88, 236.

Battle between Palamon and Arcite, the lists, 80.
Bayard, the blind horse, 155; ii. 116, 393.

Beaconsfield, Lord, represented as the protectionist

cuckoo, ii. 353.

Bear on hand, i. e., accuse falsely, 428.

Bear, the, has one mind, the leader a different one, ii.
613.

Beard, the forked, of the Merchant, 11.

Beasts, the four, of the Apocalypse, iii. 51.

Beauty, an arrow of Sweet-looking, 'ii 242.

Beauty, Simplicity, and Generosity, three arrows of

Sweet-looking, iii. 240.

Beauty, the, of Cryseyde, ii. 391.

Beauvais, the canon of, iii. 443.

Beginnings, the age of, xix.

Beguins, a sort of monks, iii. 460.

Belial, the sons of, ii. 243.

Bells, the, of the Monk, 7, 358.

Belmarye, 3.

Belshazzar and his fall, 335.

Benefice, none obtained by the clerk, 12.

Berkeley, Sir Edward, xliii.

Bernard of Clairvaux, his work in praise of the Virgin,

ii. 64.

Bernard on undevotion, ii. 218.

Bernard the monk, iii. 79.

Bernardius Gordonius, medical writer, 18.

Berners, Juliana, iii 197

Bialacoil addresses the dreamer, iii. 311.

Bialacoil complaisant, iii. 332.

Bialacoil flees, iii. 317.

Bialacoil shut up, iii. 356.

Bialacoil to be imprisoned, iii. 344.

Bible, a, used as an aid to deception by False-semblant,

iii. 466.

Bible, the, little studied by the Doctor of Physic, 18.

Bible, the, quoted, 405.

Bible the, the good wives mentioned in it, 445.

Biblical references in Chaucer, cxxv.

"Bicched bones," the, 408.

Bigamy referred to by the Wife of Bath, 421.

Bill, the, against Virginia, 390.

Bill to Pity, ii. 280.

Bird, a. restored to life by a grain, iii. 640.

Birds, a harmony of, ii. 338.

Birds like freedom, Boethius quoted, ii. 24.

Birds of all sorts, ii. 342.

Birds singing in May, iii. 80.

Birds singing in spring, iii. 209.

Birds, their songs, iii. 533.

Blackberrying, gone a, 398.

Blanche, duchess of Lancaster, ii. 282.

Bliss, perfect, in heaven and in wedlock, 568.
Blue, the color of truth, ii. 380, 524.

Bobbe-up-and-down, i. e., Harbletown, ii. 119.

Boccaccio, xx., 510; ii. 337.

Boccaccio's De Casibus Virorum Illustrium, 328.

Boccaccio's De Claris Mulieribus, 337-

Boccaccio's Teseide, 34.

Body, Christ's, torn by oaths, 410.

Boethius, 375; ii. 382; iii. 36.

Boethius, his genius, lviii.

Boethius, his reference to the chain of love, ii. 557.

Boethius, his work on music, 377.

Boethius on predestination, ii. 595.

Boethius quoted, 24, 45, 112.

Boethius's Consolations of Philosophy, xxiii. ; iii. 404

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