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William Blake

Does the Eagle know what is in the pit?

Or wilt thou go ask the Mole:

Can Wisdom be put in a silver rod?

Or Love in a golden bowl?

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noun

One who, or that which, accelerates.

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LIST OF CHAUCER'S WORKS.

68 lines
Geoffrey Chaucer·1343–1400
he following list is arranged, _conjecturally_, in chronological order. Itwill be understood that much of the arrangement and some of the dates aredue to guesswork; on a few points scholars are agreed. See further in pp.20-91 below, &c. Of the Poems marked (a), there seem to have been _two_editions, (a) being the earlier. The letters and numbers appended at theend denote the _metres_, according to the following scheme. A = octosyllabic metre; B = ballad metre, in Sir Thopas; C = 4-line stanza,in the Proverbes; P = Prose. The following sixteen metres are original (i. e. in _English_); viz. 1 =8-line stanza, _ababbcbc_; 1 b = the same, thrice, with refrain. 2 = 7-linestanza, _ababbcc_; 2 b = the same, thrice, with refrain; 2 _c_ = 7-linestanza, _ababbab_. 3 = terza rima. 4 = 10-line stanza, _aabaabcddc_. 5 =9-line stanza, _aabaabbab_; 5 b = the same, with internal rimes. 6 =virelai of 16 lines. 7 = 9-line stanza, _aabaabbcc_. 8 = roundel. 9 =heroic couplet. 10 = 6-line stanza, _ababcb_, repeated six times. 11 =10-line stanza, _aabaabbaab_. 12 = 5-line stanza, _aabba_. *** C. T. = Canterbury Tales; L. G. W. = Legend of Good Women; M. P. =Minor Poems. Origenes upon the Maudeleyne (See L. G. W., A 418; lost.)Book of the Leoun (C. T., I. 1087; lost).(a) Ceys and Alcion (C. T., B. 57; Bk. Duch. 62-214).--A.Romaunt of the Rose, ll. 1-1705; rest lost.--A.A. B. C.; in M. P. I.--1.1369. Book of the Duchesse; M. P. III.--A.(a) Lyf of Seynt Cecyle (L. G. W., B 426; C. T.,G. 1-553).--2[184].(a) Monkes Tale (parts of); except B. 3565-3652.--1.ab. 1372-3. (a) Clerkes Tale; except E. 995-1008, and the Envoy.--2.(a) Palamon and Arcite (scraps preserved).--2.Compleint to his Lady; M. P. VI.--2. 3. 4.An Amorous Compleint, made at Windsor; M. P. XXII.--2.Compleint unto Pitè; M. P. II.--2.Anelida and Arcite (10 stt. from Palamon); M. P. VII.--2. 5. 6. 5 b.(a) The Tale of Melibeus.--P.(a) The Persones Tale.--P.(a) Of the Wreched Engendring of Mankinde (L. G. W., A. 414;cf. C. T., B. 99-121, &c.)--2.(a) Man of Lawes Tale; amplified in C. T.--2.1377-81. Translation of Boethius.--P.1379? Compleint of Mars; M. P. IV.--2. 7.1379-83. Troilus and Criseyde (3 stt. from Palamon).--2.Wordes to Adam (concerning Boece and Troilus);M. P. VIII.--2.The Former Age (from Boece); M. P. IX.--1.Fortune (hints from Boece); M. P. X.--1 b. 2 c.1382. Parlement of Foules (16 stt. from Palamon); M. P. V.--2. 8.1383-4. House of Fame.--A.1385-6. Legend of Good Women.--9.1386. Canterbury Tales begun.1387-8. Central period of the Canterbury Tales.1389, &c. The Tales continued.--B. 1. 2. 9. 10. P.1391. Treatise on the Astrolabe.--P.1393? Compleint of Venus; M. P. XVIII.--1 b. 11.1393. Lenvoy to Scogan; M. P. XVI.--2.1396. Lenvoy to Bukton; M. P. XVII.--1.1399. Envoy to Compleint to his Purse; M. P. XIX.--12. The following occasional triple roundel and balades _may_ have beencomposed between 1380 and 1396:-- Merciless Beautè; M. P. XI--8.Balade to Rosamounde; M. P. XII.--1 b.Against Women Unconstaunt; M. P. XXI--2 b.(_a_) Compleint to his Purse; M. P. XIX.--2 b.Lak of Stedfastnesse; M. P. XV.--2 b.Gentilesse; M. P. XIV.--2 b.Truth; M. P. XIII.--2 b.Proverbes of Chaucer; M. P. XX.--C. * * * * *