The First Fragment of The Canterbury Tales contains some of Chaucer's most popular and widely enjoyed work. Chaucer introduces his pilgrims in The General Prologue, a set of speaking portraits drawn with a loving clarity that makes no attempt to conceal imperfections. The pilgrims represent human society, and the tales of the Knight, Miller, Reeve and Cook reveal a variety of human preoccupations, particularly romantic and sexual love. Each tale is alive with Chaucer's skills as a poet, as a storyteller and as a creator of comedy. This edition is so designed that the First Fragment can be read as a unit. A very full glossary faces Chaucer's text, and a detailed set of explanatory notes follows it, so that students and readers approaching Th...
"The Life of Chaucer, and the introductory discourse to the Canterbury tales, are taken from the val...
It is thought that Chaucer began composing The Canterbury Tales as a dramatic whole around 1387. Thi...
"It has ... been my [the editor's] object to try to present a free translation of the Prologue, and ...
The text of the Canterbury tales is from Tyrwhitt's edition 1775-78, the other texts from the Chiswi...
With added series title, engraved, and second half-title.Editor's introduction.--The prologue to the...
In the final decades of the 14th century, Geoffrey Chaucer chose a pilgrimage toCanterbury as the fr...
v. 1. Life of Chaucer. Essay on the language and versification of Chaucer. Introductory discourse to...
Added t.-p., engr., with vignette by Stothard, dated 1782-87. Each volume has also special t.-p.Adde...
Smolenska Greenwood Maria Katarzyna. Chaucer's Parson and Plowman in the General Prologue to the Can...
Despite intense scholarly attention over many years and innumerable editions, we still know very lit...
International audienceIn The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer takes a unique look at the evolution...
If there is one question that underpins the evaluation of any great literary work, it is the followi...
Geoffrey Chaucer is widely considered the father of English literature. This introduction begins wit...
Geoffrey Chaucer\u27s Canterbury Tales is far more than the mere poetic account of a medieval pilgri...
This innovative translation of Chaucer's classic work is presented in plain text that purposefully a...
"The Life of Chaucer, and the introductory discourse to the Canterbury tales, are taken from the val...
It is thought that Chaucer began composing The Canterbury Tales as a dramatic whole around 1387. Thi...
"It has ... been my [the editor's] object to try to present a free translation of the Prologue, and ...
The text of the Canterbury tales is from Tyrwhitt's edition 1775-78, the other texts from the Chiswi...
With added series title, engraved, and second half-title.Editor's introduction.--The prologue to the...
In the final decades of the 14th century, Geoffrey Chaucer chose a pilgrimage toCanterbury as the fr...
v. 1. Life of Chaucer. Essay on the language and versification of Chaucer. Introductory discourse to...
Added t.-p., engr., with vignette by Stothard, dated 1782-87. Each volume has also special t.-p.Adde...
Smolenska Greenwood Maria Katarzyna. Chaucer's Parson and Plowman in the General Prologue to the Can...
Despite intense scholarly attention over many years and innumerable editions, we still know very lit...
International audienceIn The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer takes a unique look at the evolution...
If there is one question that underpins the evaluation of any great literary work, it is the followi...
Geoffrey Chaucer is widely considered the father of English literature. This introduction begins wit...
Geoffrey Chaucer\u27s Canterbury Tales is far more than the mere poetic account of a medieval pilgri...
This innovative translation of Chaucer's classic work is presented in plain text that purposefully a...
"The Life of Chaucer, and the introductory discourse to the Canterbury tales, are taken from the val...
It is thought that Chaucer began composing The Canterbury Tales as a dramatic whole around 1387. Thi...
"It has ... been my [the editor's] object to try to present a free translation of the Prologue, and ...