id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 43016 Chaucer, Geoffrey Chaucer's Works, Volume 5 — Notes to the Canterbury Tales .txt text/plain 258658 37406 92 edition, in fact, is a mere collection of poems by Chaucer, Lydgate, Gower, of Chaucer, but merely wish to read the text with some degree of comfort, Notes taken from editions by Tyrwhitt, Wright, Bell, and Morris, are because Chaucer is referring to that passage in his introductory lines to Dyce, in his note upon the word, quotes two passages from Lydgate's Fall of certain words employed which do not occur elsewhere in Chaucer, viz. Chaucer uses the word again in the Clerkes Tale _Inwith_, within; a common form in Chaucer; see note to B. word _office_, and may shew how closely Chaucer has followed his original. plain from _gon_ in the next line, that Chaucer meant to use this word as a A note in Bell's Chaucer gives a translation of the form of blessing Perhaps Chaucer had read the following lines: Tyrwhitt notes--'Chaucer refers to a ./cache/43016.txt ./txt/43016.txt