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'Lat be thyne olde ensaumples' :' Chaucer and Proverbs
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Douglas Gray
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Preface xi
- Tabula Gratulatoria xiii
- A.G. Rigg's Publications, 1963-2004 xv
- 'Envoluped In Synne': The Bolton Hours and Its Confessional Formula 1
- Critical, Scientific, and Eclectic Editing of Chaucer 15
- Nonverbal Communication in Medieval England: Some Lexical Problems 44
- John of Glastonbury and Borrowings from the Vernacular 55
- Greeks in England, 1400 74
- Last Words: Latin at the End of the Confessio Amantis 99
- 'Lat be thyne olde ensaumples' :' Chaucer and Proverbs 122
- The Hermit and the Outlaw: An Edition 137
- Peter Pateshull: One-Time Friar and Poet? 167
- Manuscript Evidence for the Use of Medieval English Scientific and Utilitarian Texts 184
- Contributors 203
- Index 207
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Preface xi
- Tabula Gratulatoria xiii
- A.G. Rigg's Publications, 1963-2004 xv
- 'Envoluped In Synne': The Bolton Hours and Its Confessional Formula 1
- Critical, Scientific, and Eclectic Editing of Chaucer 15
- Nonverbal Communication in Medieval England: Some Lexical Problems 44
- John of Glastonbury and Borrowings from the Vernacular 55
- Greeks in England, 1400 74
- Last Words: Latin at the End of the Confessio Amantis 99
- 'Lat be thyne olde ensaumples' :' Chaucer and Proverbs 122
- The Hermit and the Outlaw: An Edition 137
- Peter Pateshull: One-Time Friar and Poet? 167
- Manuscript Evidence for the Use of Medieval English Scientific and Utilitarian Texts 184
- Contributors 203
- Index 207