Introduction: Forms of Translatio
Father of English Poetry, Father of Humanism: When Chaucer "met"
Petrarch
'The double sorwe of Troilus to tellen': Petrarchan Inversions in
Chaucer's Filostrato
'But if that I consente': The First English Sonnet
'Mutata veste': Griselda between Boccaccio and Petrarch
'Of hire array what sholde I make a tale?': Griselda between
Petrarch and Chaucer
Conclusion: 'translacions and enditynges'
Bibliography
WILLIAM ROSSITER Senior Lecturer in Medieval and Early Modern Literature, University of East Anglia.
A careful consideration of the relationship between Chaucer and
Petrarch, but its reach beyond that narrow focus also makes it a
valuable addition to the wider field of work on Chaucer and the tre
corone.
*MEDIUM AEVUM*
[P]rovides a wealth of information and many intriguing
readings.
*STUDIES IN THE AGE OF CHAUCER*
A thorough and scholarly consideration of the subject [and] a
valuable addition to the wider field of work on Chaucer and the tre
corone.
*MEDIUM AEVUM*
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