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Poetry from Chaucer to Spenser: based on "Chaucer to Spenser: An Anthology of Writings in English 1375 - 1575"

Derek Pearsall (Editor), Duncan Wu (Editor)
ISBN: 978-0-631-22987-2
Paperback
190 pages
September 2002, Wiley-Blackwell
List Price: US $42.95
Government Price: US $25.56
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Poetry from Chaucer to Spenser: based on

Series Editor's Preface.

Introduction.

1. Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1343-1400):.

From The Canterbury Tales:.

The General Prologue.

The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale.

The Pardoner's Prologue and Tale.

2. William Langland (fl.1375-80):.

The Vision of Piers Plowman (C-Text) (extracts).

Prologue.

Passus III.

Passus V.

Passus VI.

3. The Gawain-Poet (fl. 1390):.

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: Fit 3.

4. Robert Henryson (c. 1430-c. 1505):.

The Testament of Cresseid.

The Fables.

The Fox and the Wolf.

The Wolf and the Wether.

5. William Dunbar (c. 1456-c. 1515):.

Meditation in Winter.

Christ in Triumph.

The Golden Targe (extracts).

The Treatise of the Two Married Women and the Widow (extracts).

‘Timor Mortis Conturbat Me'.

6. Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-42):.

‘The longe love, that in my thought doeth harbor'.

‘Who-so list to hunt, I knowe where is an hynde'.

‘Farewell, Love, and all thy lawes for ever'.

‘My galy charged with forgetfulnes'.

‘Madame, withouten many wordes';.

‘They fle from me that sometyme did me seke'.

‘What no, perdy, ye may be sure!'.

‘Marvaill no more all-tho'.

‘Tho I cannot your crueltie constrain'.

‘To wish and want and not obtain'.

‘Some-tyme I fled the fyre that me brent'.

‘The furyous gonne is his rajing yre'.

‘My lute, awake! perfourme the last'.

‘In eternum I was ons determed'.

‘Hevyn and erth and all that here me plain'.

‘To cause accord or to agre'.

‘You that in love finde lucke and habundaunce'.

‘What rage is this? what furour of what kynd?'.

‘Is it possible?'.

‘Forget not yet the tryde entent'.

‘Blame not my lute for he must sownde'.

‘What shulde I saye'.

‘Spight hath no powre to make me sadde'.

‘I abide and abide and better abide'.

‘Stond who-so list upon the slipper toppe'.

‘Throughout the world, if it wer sought'.

‘In court to serve decked with freshe aray'.

7. Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1517-47):.

‘When raging love with extreme payne'.

‘The soote season, that bud and blome furth bringes'.

‘Set me wheras the sonne doth perche the grene'.

‘Love, that doth raine and live within my thought'.

‘Alas, so all thinges nowe do holde their peace'.

‘Geve place, ye lovers, here before'.

Epitaph for Wyatt.

8. Edmund Spenser (1552-99):.

From The Shepherd's Calender.

January.

Index of titles and first lines.

Related Titles

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