|
CORRIGENDUM: MIDDLE ENGLISH "WRABBE, WROBBE" |
|
10/1, p. -1 |
|
CORRIGENDUM: THE DATE OF THE EARLY ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF THE "CANDET NUDATUM PECTUS" |
|
4/1, p. -1 |
Stephen H.A. Shepherd |
‘Heathenic’ catechesis and the source of Awntyrs B |
|
81/2, p. 1 |
E.V. Gordon |
ON "HRAFNKELS SAGA FREYSGOĐA" |
|
8/1, p. 1 |
Jean Misrahi |
GIRARD DE VIENNE ET LA GESTE DE GUILLAUME |
|
4/1, p. 1 |
Roger Fowler |
A THEME IN THE "WANDERER" |
|
36/1, p. 1 |
Ian Cornelius |
Passus secundus de dobest: on the genesis of a rubric in the archetype of Piers Plowman B |
|
84/1, p. 1 |
John Frankis |
Layamon and the fortunes of yogh |
|
73/1, p. 1 |
|
EDITORIAL |
|
|
O.S. PICKERING |
South English Legendary style in Robert of Gloucester's Chronicle |
|
70/1, p. 1 |
Roger Fowler |
'ARCHBISHOP WULFSTAN'S COMMONPLACE-BOOK' AND THE "CANONS OF EDGAR" |
|
32/1, p. 1 |
P.B. Salmon |
THE 'THREE VOICES' OF POETRY IN MEDIÆVAL LITERARY THEORY |
|
30/1, p. 1 |
Joseph L. Baird |
UNFERTH THE "PYLE" |
|
39/1, p. 1 |
F.H. Whitman |
SIGNIFICANT MOTIFS IN RIDDLE 53 |
|
46/1, p. 1 |
W.B. Yapp |
A NEW LOOK AT ENGLISH BESTIARIES |
|
54/1, p. 1 |
MILIJA N. PAVLOVIĆ, Roger M. Walker |
A REAPPRAISAL OF THE CLOSING SCENES OF THE "POEMA DE MIO CID" I: THE "RIEPTOS" |
|
58/1, p. 1 |
ROGER DAHOOD |
DESIGN IN PART I OF "ANCRENE RIWLE" |
|
56/1, p. 1 |
Norman Davis, John Stevens |
J. A. W. BENNETT (1911-1981) |
|
50/1, p. 1 |
ROGER DAHOOD |
A NOTE ON "BEOWULF" 1104-8a |
|
49/1, p. 1 |
Peter J. Lucas |
EASTER, THE DEATH OF ST GUTHLAC AND THE LITURGY FOR HOLY SATURDAY IN FELIX'S "VITA" AND THE OLD ENGLISH "GUTHLAC" B |
|
61/1, p. 1 |
Richard North |
GETTING TO KNOW THE GENERAL IN "THE BATTLE OF MALDON" |
|
60/1, p. 1 |
J.A. TASIOULAS |
THE MOTHER'S LAMENT: "WULF AND EADWACER" RECONSIDERED |
|
65/1, p. 1 |
J.H. Mozley |
THE COLLECTION OF MEDIÆVAL LATIN VERSE IN MS. COTTON TITUS D. XXIV |
|
11/, p. 1 |
J.L.N. O'Loughlin |
"BEOWULF"—ITS UNITY AND PURPOSE |
|
21/, p. 1 |
Carole Hough |
Alfred's domboc and the language of rape: a reconsideration of Alfred ch. 11 |
|
66/1, p. 1 |
Mark Faulkner |
Ælfric, St Edmund, and St Edwold of Cerne |
|
77/1, p. 1 |
J.S. McKINNELL |
Myth as therapy: the usefulness of Þrymskviða |
|
69/1, p. 1 |
|
LEGAL PHRASEOLOGY IN A PASSAGE IN "PEARL" |
|
16/, p. 9 |
GUY TRUDEL |
The Middle English Book of Penance and the readers of the Cursor mundi |
|
74/1, p. 10 |
R.W. Burchfield |
A SOURCE OF SCRIBAL ERROR IN EARLY MIDDLE ENGLISH MANUSCRIPTS |
|
22/1, p. 10 |
ALISON WIGGINS |
Are Auchinleck Manuscript Scribes 1 and 6 the same scribe? The advantages of whole-data analysis and electronic texts |
|
73/1, p. 10 |
Richard Leighton Greene |
THE MEANING OF THE CORPUS CHRISTI CAROL |
|
29/1, p. 10 |
GERALDINE BARNES |
CUNNING AND INGENUITY IN THE MIDDLE ENGLISH FLORIS AND BLAUNCHEFLUR |
|
53/1, p. 10 |
JAMES WADE |
Abduction, surgery, madness: an account of a little red man in Thomas Walsingham’s Chronica maiora |
|
77/1, p. 10 |
Helen L. Gardner |
THE TEXT OF "THE SCALE OF PERFECTION" |
|
5/1, p. 11 |
Murray Copland |
THE SHIPMAN'S TALE: CHAUCER AND BOCCACCIO |
|
35/1, p. 11 |
Maldwyn Mills |
A MEDIÆVAL REVISER AT WORK |
|
32/1, p. 11 |
Kathleen Chesney |
NOTES ON SOME TREATISES OF DEVOTION INTENDED FOR MARGARET OF YORK (MS. DOUCE 365) |
|
20/, p. 11 |
L. Whitbread |
THE BINDING OF WELAND |
|
25/1, p. 13 |
Murray Copland |
THE REEVE'S TALE: HARLOTRIE OR SERMONYNG? |
|
31/1, p. 14 |
Neil Cartlidge |
Nicholas of Guildford and The Owl and the Nightingale |
|
79/1, p. 14 |
Brendan O'Connell |
'Struglyng wel and myghtily’: resisting rape in the Man of Law’s Tale. |
|
84/1, p. 16 |
Elspeth Kennedy |
FAILURE IN ARTHURIAN ROMANCE |
|
60/1, p. 16 |
CYRIL EDWARDS |
THE GROWTH OF A SONG: HEINRICH VON MORUNGEN'S "ROBBER LADY" (MF 130, 9) |
|
58/1, p. 17 |
Charles Russell Stone |
‘Many man he shal do woo’: portents and the end of an empire in Kyng Alisaunder |
|
81/2, p. 18 |
Constance Bullock-Davies |
THE FORM OF THE BRETON LAY |
|
42/1, p. 18 |
Stephen H.A. Shepherd |
THE MIDDLE ENGLISH "PSEUDO-TURPIN CHRONICLE" |
|
65/1, p. 19 |
Maldwyn Mills |
HAVELOK'S RETURN |
|
45/1, p. 20 |
AUDREY L. MEANEY |
THE "IDES" OF THE COTTON GNOMIC POEM |
|
48/1, p. 23 |
George W. Brewer, Bedwyr Lewis Jones |
POPULAR TALE MOTIFS AND HISTORICAL TRADITION IN "BREUDWYT MAXEN" |
|
|
C.L. Wrenn |
LATE OLD ENGLISH RUNE-NAMES |
|
|
E.O. Winstedt |
SIEGFRIED |
|
21/, p. 25 |
G.R. Evans, David D'Avray |
AN UNUSUAL "ARS PRAEDICANDI" |
|
49/1, p. 26 |
Nicolas Jacobs |
THE PROCESSES OF SCRIBAL SUBSTITUTION AND REDACTION: A STUDY OF THE CAMBRIDGE FRAGMENT OF "SIR DEGARRÉ" |
|
53/1, p. 26 |
ÁRMANN JAKOBSSON |
The amplified saga: structural disunity in Morkinskinna |
|
70/1, p. 29 |
PAULINE HEAD |
Who is the nun from Heidenheim? A study of Hugeburc’s Vita Willibaldi |
|
71/1, p. 29 |
A. McI. Trounce |
THE ENGLISH TAIL-RHYME ROMANCES. (Continued) |
|
3/1, p. 30 |
PAMELA M. KING |
Calendar and text: Christ's ministry in the York plays and the liturgy |
|
67/1, p. 30 |
James Kinsley |
THE TRETIS OF THE TUA MARIIT WEMEN AND THE WEDO |
|
23/1, p. 31 |
S. Harrison Thomson |
THREE ANGLO-NORMAN TRANSLATIONS OF THE "VENI CREATOR SPIRITUS" |
|
8/1, p. 33 |
M.L. HOLFORD |
A local source for Horn Child and Maiden Rimnild |
|
74/1, p. 34 |
A. McI. Trounce |
THE ENGLISH TAIL-RHYME ROMANCES. (Continued) |
|
|
ALAN MacCOLL |
Rhetoric, narrative, and conceptions of history in the French Prose Brut |
|
78/1, p. 35 |
Olive Sayce |
ABORTIVE MOTIVATION IN PART I OF THE "NIBELUNGENLIED" |
|
23/1, p. 36 |
|
CORRIGENDA: THE AUTHENTICITY OF THE Z-TEXT OF "PIERS PLOWMAN": FURTHER NOTES ON METRICAL EVIDENCE |
|
57/1, p. 37 |
R.W. Burchfield |
TWO MISREADINGS OF THE "ORMULUM MANUSCRIPT" |
|
21/, p. 37 |
PETER MEREDITH |
'NOLO MORTEM' AND THE "LUDUS COVENTRIAE" PLAY OF THE "WOMAN TAKEN IN ADULTERY" |
|
38/1, p. 38 |
J.M. Evans |
MICROCOSMIC ADAM |
|
35/1, p. 38 |
John J. Thompson |
LITERARY ASSOCIATIONS OF AN ANONYMOUS MIDDLE ENGLISH PARAPHRASE OF VULGATE PSALM L |
|
57/1, p. 38 |
R. Bowen |
THE DREAMS OF CHARLEMAGNE |
|
23/1, p. 39 |
Joseph E. Gallagher |
THE DOUBLE SORROW OF TROILUS |
|
41/1, p. 39 |
C.T. Onions |
Middle English gawne |
|
21/, p. 39 |
N.R. Ker |
THE HAGUE MANUSCRIPT OF THE EPISTOLA CUTHBERTI DE OBITU BEDÆ WITH BEDE'S SONG |
|
8/1, p. 40 |
CHRISTOPHER HOHLER |
THE PROPER OFFICE OF ST. NICHOLAS AND RELATED MATTERS WITH REFERENCE TO A RECENT BOOK |
|
36/1, p. 40 |
Huw Grange |
A paraphrase of the Miserere in Anglo-Norman verse (Lambeth Palace, MS 431) |
|
84/1, p. 40 |
|
CORRIGENDA: LANGLAND'S DIALECT |
|
55/1, p. 40 |
Megan Leitch |
Thinking twice about treason in Caxton’s prose romances: proper chivalric conduct and the English printing press |
|
81/2, p. 41 |
BELLA MILLETT |
THE TEXTUAL TRANSMISSION OF "SEINTE IULIENE" |
|
59/1, p. 41 |
W.G. COOKE, D'A.J.D. BOULTON |
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: a poem for Henry of Grosmont? |
|
68/1, p. 42 |
T.P. Dunning |
LANGLAND AND THE SALVATION OF THE HEATHEN |
|
12/, p. 45 |
Peter Dronke |
THE CONCLUSION OF "TROILUS AND CRISEYDE" |
|
33/1, p. 47 |
Christopher Cannon |
The form of the self: Ancrene Wisse and romance |
|
70/1, p. 47 |
Helen Phillips |
THE GHOST'S BAPTISM IN "THE AWNTYRS OFF ARTHURE" |
|
58/1, p. 49 |
Piero Boitani |
THE "MONK'S TALE": DANTE AND BOCCACCIO |
|
45/1, p. 50 |
RICHARD W. KAEUPER |
AN HISTORIAN'S READING OF "THE TALE OF GAMELYN" |
|
52/1, p. 51 |
VICTOR I. SCHERB |
CONCEPTION, FLIES, AND HERESY IN SKELTON'S 'REPLYCACION' |
|
62/1, p. 51 |
CONSTANCE B. HIEATT |
THE MIDDLE ENGLISH CULINARY RECIPES IN MS HARLEY 5401: AN EDITION AND COMMENTARY |
|
65/1, p. 54 |
JOHN C. HIRSH |
PRAYER AND MEDITATION IN LATE MEDIAEVAL ENGLAND: MS BODLEY 789 |
|
48/1, p. 55 |
SUZANNE M. YEAGER |
Jewish identity in The Siege of Jerusalem and homiletic texts: models of penance and victims of vengeance for the urban apocalypse |
|
80/2, p. 56 |
Norman Davis |
NOTES ON THE MIDDLE ENGLISH "BESTIARY" |
|
19/, p. 56 |
H.J.R. Murray |
THE MEDIÆVAL GAMES OF TABLES |
|
10/2, p. 57 |
Kemp Malone |
BEOWULFIANA |
|
|
HELEN BARR |
Pearl - or the jeweller's tale |
|
69/1, p. 59 |
Michael C. Seymour |
Chaucer’s Book of the Duchess: a proposal |
|
74/1, p. 60 |
Lucas Wood |
Of werewolves and wicked women: Melion’s misogyny reconsidered |
|
84/1, p. 60 |
Susanna Greer Fein |
A THIRTEEN-LINE ALLITERATIVE STANZA ON THE ABUSE OF PRAYER FROM THE AUDELAY MS |
|
63/1, p. 61 |
Enid M. Raynes |
MS. BOULOGNE-SUR-MER 63 AND ÆLFRIC |
|
26/2, p. 65 |
R.I. Page |
THE OLD ENGLISH RUNE "EAR" |
|
30/2, p. 65 |
Kemp Malone |
NOTES ON GNOMIC POEM B OF THE EXETER BOOK |
|
12/, p. 65 |
A. McI. Trounce |
CHAUCER'S IMPERATIVE WITH "AS" |
|
|
ALISON WILLIAMS |
Stories within stories: writing history in Fouke le Fitz Waryn |
|
81/2, p. 70 |
Hilda R. Ellis |
FOSTERING BY GIANTS IN OLD NORSE SAGA LITERATURE |
|
10/2, p. 70 |
Cecily Clark |
NOTES ON MS. LAUD MISC. 636 |
|
23/2, p. 71 |
C.L. Wrenn |
THE TEXT OF "HAVARÐAR SAGA ISFIRÐINGS" |
|
|
J.B. Wynn |
THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR IN BEDE AND THE ANGLO-SAXON CHRONICLE |
|
25/2, p. 71 |
A.O. Anderson, N. Denholm-Young |
CRONICA DE MELROS |
|
6/1, p. 72 |
Henry Hargreaves |
THE LATIN TEXT OF PURVEY'S PSALTER |
|
24/2, p. 73 |
D.G. Hoggan |
THE VERSION OF "ALISCANS" KNOWN TO THE AUTHOR OF "FOUCON DE CANDIE" |
|
26/2, p. 74 |
Karl Leyser |
A RECENT VIEW OF THE GERMAN COLLEGE OF ELECTORS |
|
23/2, p. 76 |
Ethel Seaton |
ROBERT MANNYNG OF BRUNNE IN LINCOLN |
|
12/, p. 77 |
Ida L. Gordon |
THE MURDER OF PORGRÍMR IN "GÍSLASAGA SÚRSSONAR" |
|
3/2, p. 79 |
A.J. Bliss |
THE HERO'S NAME IN THE MIDDLE ENGLISH VERSIONS OF "LANVAL" |
|
27/2, p. 80 |
J.E. Cross |
KING ARTHUR IN THE OLD SWEDISH LEGENDARY |
|
30/2, p. 80 |
Charles W. Jones |
THE BYRHTFERTH GLOSSES |
|
7/2, p. 81 |
Margaret E. Goldsmith |
THE CHRISTIAN THEME OF "BEOWULF" |
|
29/2, p. 81 |
PENNY ELEY |
History and romance in the Chronique des ducs de Normandie |
|
68/1, p. 81 |
HEATHER O'DONOGHUE |
What has Baldr to do with Lamech? The lethal shot of a blind man in Old Norse myth and Jewish exegetical traditions |
|
72/1, p. 82 |
J.S. McKINNELL |
Wisdom from the dead: the Ljóðatal section of Hávamál |
|
76/1, p. 85 |
P.J. FOURACRE |
THE CONTEXT OF THE OHG "LUDWIGSLIED" |
|
54/1, p. 87 |
GEOFF RECTOR |
En sa chambre sovent le lit: literary leisure and the chamber sociabilities of early Anglo-French literature (c.1100-1150) |
|
81/2, p. 88 |
W.P. Albrecht |
A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY TEXT OF THOMAS OF ERCELDOUNE |
|
23/2, p. 88 |
John Leyerle |
BEOWULF THE HERO AND THE KING |
|
34/2, p. 89 |
Pierre Courroux |
Enguerrand de Monstrelet et les assassinats de Louis d’Orléans et Jean sans Peur |
|
84/1, p. 89 |
J.A.W. Bennett |
OLD ENGLISH "HROHIAN" |
|
11/, p. 90 |
R. Wayne Hamm |
A CRITICAL EVALUATION OF THE "CONFISYON DEL AMANTE", THE CASTILIAN TRANSLATION OF GOWER'S "CONFESSIO AMANTIS" |
|
47/1, p. 91 |
J.R.R. Tolkien |
SIGELWARA LAND. (Continued) |
|
3/2, p. 95 |
G.V. Smithers |
THE MEANING OF "THE SEAFARER" AND "THE WANDERER": APPENDIX |
|
28/2, p. 99 |
Jane Roberts |
EVIDENCES FOR WITCHCRAFT IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND |
|
32/2, p. 99 |
S. Harrison Thomson |
THE DATE OF THE EARLY ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF THE "CANDET NUDATUM PECTUS" |
|
4/2, p. 100 |
R.L. Reynolds |
AN ECHO OF "BEOWULF" in ATHELSTAN'S CHARTERS OF 931-933 A.D.? |
|
24/2, p. 101 |
Richard Beadle |
Fifteenth-century political verses from the Holkham archives |
|
71/1, p. 101 |
Dorena Allen Wright |
ORPHEUS AND ORFEO: THE DEAD AND THE "TAKEN" |
|
33/2, p. 102 |
W.B. LOCKWOOD |
SOME EXPRESSIONS FOR THE SETTING SUN |
|
48/1, p. 102 |
RICHARD DAVID WISSOLIK |
DUKE WILLIAM'S MESSENGERS: AN 'INSOLUBLE, REVERSE-ORDER' SCENE OF THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY |
|
51/1, p. 102 |
J.E. Cross |
ON THE ALLEGORY IN "THE SEAFARER"—ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES |
|
28/2, p. 104 |
|
Corrigendum: THE INTRODUCTION TO THE DREAM IN "PEARL" |
|
48/1, p. 106 |
William A. Craigie |
NEW EDITIONS OF THE ICELANDIC SAGAS |
|
21/, p. 106 |
Frederic Amory |
THE SATIRES OF SEXTUS AMARCIUS |
|
39/2, p. 108 |
ÁRMANN JAKOBSSON |
King Sverrir of Norway and the foundations of his power: kingship ideology and narrative in Sverris saga |
|
84/1, p. 109 |
C.T. Onions |
MIDDLE ENGLISH "GAWNE": A CORRECTION, WITH SOME NOTES |
|
22/2, p. 111 |
Joseph Szövérffy |
VIRGIL AND A LATIN CHRISTMAS CAROL |
|
26/2, p. 111 |
N.R. Ker |
A MIDDLE-ENGLISH SUMMARY OF THE BIBLE |
|
29/2, p. 115 |
JOHN NORTON-SMITH |
CHAUCER'S "ETAS PRIMA" |
|
32/2, p. 117 |
W.S.M. Nicoll |
SOME PASSAGES IN EINHARD'S "VITA KAROLI" IN RELATION TO SUETONIUS |
|
|
A.G. Mitchell |
THE TEXT OF "PIERS PLOWMAN" C. Prologue 1. 215 |
|
8/2, p. 118 |
Richard A. Lewis |
ALLITERATION AND OLD ENGLISH METRE |
|
42/2, p. 119 |
J.S. McKINNELL |
ON THE DATE OF "THE BATTLE OF MALDON" |
|
|
Maldwyn Mills |
A NOTE ON "SIR LAUNFAL" 733-744 |
|
35/2, p. 122 |
Douglas Brooks, Alastair Fowler |
THE MEANING OF CHAUCER'S "KNIGHT'S TALE" |
|
39/2, p. 123 |
R.I. Page |
THE OLD ENGLISH RUNE "EOH, ÍH, 'YEW-TREE'" |
|
37/2, p. 125 |
Alan Fedrick |
A NOTE ON THE "FOLIE TRISTAN DE BERNE" |
|
32/2, p. 125 |
E.V. Gordon, C.T. Onions |
NOTES ON THE TEXT AND INTERPRETATION OF "PEARL" |
|
|
R.C. Goffin |
CHAUCER AND ELOCUTION |
|
4/3, p. 127 |
A.H. MacLaine |
CHAUCER'S WINE-CASK IMAGE : WORD PLAY IN "THE REEVE'S PROLOGUE" |
|
31/2, p. 129 |
W.S. Angus |
THE EIGHTH SCRIBE'S DATES IN THE PARKER MANUSCRIPT OF THE ANGLO-SAXON CHRONICLE |
|
10/3, p. 130 |
A.V.C. Schmidt |
LANGLAND AND SCHOLASTIC PHILOSOPHY |
|
38/2, p. 134 |
|
Erratum: THE PETITIONS OF THE PATERNOSTER IN MEDIÆVAL ENGLISH LITERATURE |
|
27/2, p. 135 |
James L. Rosier |
"HEAFOD" AND "HELM": CONTEXTUAL COMPOSITION IN "BEOWULF" |
|
37/2, p. 137 |
Rosemary Woolf |
DOCTRINAL INFLUENCES ON "THE DREAM OF THE ROOD" |
|
27/3, p. 137 |
G.V. Smithers |
THE MEANING OF THE "SEAFARER" AND "THE WANDERER" |
|
26/3, p. 137 |
N.R. Ker |
THE SCRIBES OF THE "TRINITY HOMILIES" |
|
|
JOHN C. HIRSH |
AUTHOR AND SCRIBE IN "THE BOOK OF MARGERY KEMPE" |
|
|
Donald Schueler |
THE AGE OF THE LOVER IN GOWER'S "CONFESSIO AMANTIS" |
|
36/2, p. 152 |
J.L.N. O'Loughlin |
THE MIDDLE ENGLISH ALLITERATIVE: MORTE ARTHURE |
|
4/3, p. 153 |
H.B. Willson |
CONCORD AND DISCORD: THE DIALECTIC OF THE "NIBELUNGENLIED" |
|
28/3, p. 153 |
Donald C. Miller |
THE SEQUENCE OF THE "WALDHERE" FRAGMENTS |
|
10/3, p. 155 |
Gwyn Jones |
FJÖRBAUGSGARƉR |
|
9/3, p. 155 |
C.T. Onions |
MIDDLE ENGLISH "WRABBE, WROBBE" |
|
10/3, p. 159 |
R. SHARPE |
AN "EXORTACIO AD CONTEMPLACIONEM" FROM FARNE ISLAND |
|
54/2, p. 159 |
Tony Hunt |
"DELICIAE CLERICORUM": INTELLECTUAL AND SCIENTIFIC PURSUITS IN TWO DORSET MONASTERIES |
|
56/2, p. 159 |
M.A.L. Locherbie-Cameron |
BYRHTNOTH, HIS NOBLE COMPANION AND HIS SISTER'S SON |
|
57/2, p. 159 |
P.J. Frankis |
DEOR AND "WULF AND EADWACER" : SOME CONJECTURES |
|
31/3, p. 161 |
W.J. Keith |
LAƷAMON'S "BRUT": THE LITERARY DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE TWO TEXTS |
|
29/3, p. 161 |
Alfred Ewert |
ANGLO-NORMAN STUDIES |
|
7/2, p. 164 |
E.V. Gordon, C.T. Onions |
NOTES ON THE TEXT AND INTERPRETATION OF "PEARL" (Continued) |
|
|
Curt F. Bühler |
A LOLLARD TRACT: ON TRANSLATING THE BIBLE INTO ENGLISH |
|
7/3, p. 167 |
S.O. Andrew |
SOME PRINCIPLES OF OLD ENGLISH WORD-ORDER |
|
3/3, p. 167 |
A. McI. Trounce |
THE ENGLISH TAIL-RHYME ROMANCES. (Continued) |
|
|
E.V. Gordon |
"WEALHþEOW" AND RELATED NAMES |
|
4/3, p. 169 |
C.E. Wright |
ROBERT TALBOT AND "DOMITIAN A. IX" |
|
6/2, p. 170 |
M.M. Lascelles |
ALEXANDER AND THE EARTHLY PARADISE IN MEDIÆVAL ENGLISH WRITINGS (Continued) |
|
5/3, p. 173 |
Peter Orton |
THE OE 'SOUL AND BODY': A FURTHER EXAMINATION |
|
48/2, p. 173 |
B.D.H. Miller |
TWO NOTES ON "DAME SIRITH" |
|
28/3, p. 180 |
VALERIE EDDEN |
A CAROLINGIAN PARODY OF PASTORAL |
|
49/2, p. 180 |
WILLIAM A. QUINN |
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF "ST ERKENWALD" |
|
53/2, p. 180 |
J.R.R. Tolkien |
SIGELWARA LAND |
|
|
G.W.S. Friedrichsen |
GOTHIC NOTES |
|
29/3, p. 184 |
Jane L. Curry |
APPROACHES TO A TRANSLATION OF THE ANGLO-SAXON "THE WIFE'S LAMENT" |
|
35/3, p. 187 |
CLAUDE LUTTRELL |
"CLEANNESS" AND THE KNIGHT OF LA TOUR LANDRY |
|
29/3, p. 187 |
Avril Henry |
TEMPTATION AND HUNT IN "SIR GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT" |
|
45/2, p. 187 |
Mishtooni Bose |
FROM EXEGESIS TO APPROPRIATION: THE MEDIEVAL SOLOMON |
|
65/2, p. 187 |
B.D.H. Miller |
'SHE WHO HATH DRUNK ANY POTION' ... |
|
31/3, p. 188 |
ALAN J. FLETCHER |
THE SERMON BOOKLETS OF FRIAR NICHOLAS PHILIP |
|
55/2, p. 188 |
J.K. Bostock |
THE ORTHOGRAPHY OF THE OLD HIGH GERMAN "GEORGSLIED" |
|
5/3, p. 189 |
SERGEY IVANOV, SVETLANA KLEYNER |
The English versions of the Friday legend: three and twelve |
|
84/2, p. 189 |
A. McI. Trounce |
THE ENGLISH TAIL-RHYME ROMANCES (Continued) |
|
|
Michael G. Sargent |
WALTER HILTON'S "SCALE OF PERFECTION": THE LONDON MANUSCRIPT GROUP RECONSIDERED |
|
52/2, p. 189 |
LYNNE GRUNDY |
GOD MEDITATES: A MODEL FOR THE 'SALVATION HISTORIES' IN THREE HOMILIES OF ÆLFRIC AND IN HIS "HEXAMERON" |
|
61/2, p. 189 |
Olive Sayce |
LESLIE SEIFFERT (1934-1990) |
|
59/2, p. 189 |
Andrew Galloway |
Word-play and political satire: solving the riddle of the text of Jezebel |
|
68/2, p. 189 |
SUSAN E. DESKIS |
Jonah and genre in Resignation B |
|
67/2, p. 189 |
BEN PARSONS |
Shearing the shepherds: violence and anticlerical satire in Langland’s Piers Plowman |
|
79/2, p. 189 |
R.D. FULK |
Six cruces in the Finnsburg Fragment and Episode |
|
74/2, p. 191 |
Jill Mann |
ALLEGORICAL BUILDINGS IN MEDIAEVAL LITERATURE |
|
63/2, p. 191 |
D. Whitelock |
BEOWULF 2444-2471 |
|
8/3, p. 198 |
B.K. Martin |
"SIR LAUNFAL" AND THE FOLKTALE |
|
35/3, p. 199 |
Daniel Anlezark |
The stray ending in the Solomonic anthology in Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 422 |
|
80/1, p. 201 |
Marion E. Gibbs |
ITHER VON GAHEVIEZ AND THE GREEN CASKET: A NOTE ON TREVRIZENT'S ENCOUNTER WITH GAHMURET ("PARZIVAL" 497, 22-498, 20) |
|
48/2, p. 201 |
MARGARET LAING |
Notes on Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Digby 86, The Names of a Hare in English |
|
67/2, p. 201 |
JOHN BUGBEE |
Sight and sound in St Erkenwald: on theodicy and the senses |
|
77/2, p. 202 |
R.E. Kaske |
THE READING "GENYRE" IN "THE HUSBAND'S MESSAGE" LINE 49 |
|
33/3, p. 204 |
Alison Finlay |
‘Intolerable love’: Tristrams saga and the Carlisle Tristan fragment |
|
73/2, p. 205 |
S.O. Andrew |
THREE TEXTUAL CRUXES IN "BEOWULF" |
|
8/3, p. 205 |
Douglas Gray |
A TRIBUTE TO J. A. W. BENNETT (1911-1981) |
|
50/2, p. 205 |
C.T. Onions |
MIDDLE ENGLISH "ALOD, OLOD" |
|
|
BELLA MILLETT |
THE ORIGINS OF "ANCRENE WISSE": NEW ANSWERS, NEW QUESTIONS |
|
61/2, p. 206 |
W.G. COOKE |
Who cursed whom, and when? The cursing of the hoard and Beowulf’s fate |
|
76/2, p. 207 |
Bruce Harbert |
THE MYTH OF TEREUS IN OVID AND GOWER |
|
41/3, p. 208 |
JUDITH JESCH |
HISTORY IN THE 'POLITICAL SAGAS' |
|
62/2, p. 210 |
Robert Easting |
PETER OF BRAMHAM'S ACCOUNT OF A CHAPLAIN'S VISION OF PURGATORY (c. 1343?) |
|
65/2, p. 211 |
DEBORAH YOUNGS |
Vision in a Trance: a fifteenth-century vision of Purgatory |
|
67/2, p. 212 |
Kemp Malone |
THE LIDWICINGS OF "WIDSITH" |
|
6/3, p. 213 |
Daniel McCann |
Words of fire and fruit: the psychology of prayer words in the Cloud of Unknowing |
|
84/2, p. 213 |
David R. Evans |
THE SEQUENCE OF EVENTS IN "BEOWULF", 11. 207-16 |
|
32/3, p. 214 |
R.N. Illingworth |
THE STRUCTURE OF THE ANGLO-NORMAN "VOYAGE OF ST BRENDAN" BY BENEDEIT |
|
55/2, p. 217 |
C.M. WOOLGAR, Bernard O'Donoghue |
TWO MIDDLE ENGLISH POEMS AT MAGDALEN COLLEGE, OXFORD |
|
52/2, p. 217 |
Maldwyn Mills |
HAVELOK AND THE BRUTAL FISHERMAN |
|
36/3, p. 219 |
Daniel G. Calder |
"THE FATES OF THE APOSTLES", THE LATIN MARTYROLOGIES, AND THE LITANY OF THE SAINTS |
|
44/3, p. 219 |
A.K. Brown |
THE ENGLISH COMPASS POINTS |
|
47/2, p. 221 |
A. Keith Bate |
JOSEPH OF EXETER—RELIGIOUS POET |
|
40/3, p. 222 |
James L. Rosier |
A TEXTUAL AMBIGUITY IN "BEOWULF: STOD ON STAPOLE" |
|
34/3, p. 223 |
LAWRENCE WARNER |
The ending, and end, of Piers Plowman B: the C-version origins of the final two passus |
|
76/2, p. 225 |
PETER WHITEFORD |
Rereading Gawain’s five wits |
|
73/2, p. 225 |
CATHERINE LA FARGE |
CONVERSATION IN MALORY'S "MORTE DARTHUR" |
|
56/2, p. 225 |
Rachel Hands |
HORSE-DEALING LORE, OR A FIFTEENTH-CENTURY 'HELP TO DISCOURSE'? |
|
41/3, p. 230 |
Allan Westphall |
On not melting into tears: managing meditative reading in Michigan State University Library, MS 1 and Cambridge, Magdalene College, MS Pepys 2125 |
|
84/2, p. 231 |
Antonia Gransden |
SILENT MEANINGS IN RANULF HIGDEN'S "POLYCHRONICON AND IN THOMAS ELMHAM's LIBER METRICUS DE HENRICO QUINTO" |
|
46/2, p. 231 |
M.L. Samuels |
LANGLAND'S DIALECT |
|
54/2, p. 232 |
Carolyne Larrington |
"LEIZLA RANNVEIGAR": GENDER AND POLITICS IN THE OTHERWORLD VISION |
|
64/2, p. 232 |
Alison I. Gyger |
THE OLD ENGLISH "SOUL AND BODY" AS AN EXAMPLE OF ORAL TRANSMISSION |
|
38/3, p. 239 |
Ian Short |
THE PATRONAGE OF BENEIT'S "VIE DE THOMAS BECKET" |
|
56/2, p. 239 |
Thomas D. Hill |
THE MIDDLE ENGLISH LYRIC 'HOW CHRIST SHALL COME': AN INTERPRETATION |
|
52/2, p. 239 |
Thomas D. Hill |
‘The Ballad of St Stephen and Herod’: biblical history and medieval popular religious culture |
|
70/2, p. 240 |
JOHN NORTON-SMITH |
EKPHRASIS AS A STYLISTIC ELEMENT IN DOUGLAS'S "PALIS OF HONOURE" |
|
48/2, p. 240 |
Mabel Day |
TWO NOTES ON "PEARL" |
|
3/3, p. 241 |
ALISON SPEDDING |
‘I shalle send word in writing’: lexical choices and legal acumen in the letters of Margaret Paston |
|
77/2, p. 241 |
BENJAMIN T. HUDSON |
‘Brjáns Saga’ |
|
71/2, p. 241 |
BARBARA K. ALTMANN, F. REGINA PSAKI |
Considering holy war in Le Charroi de Nîmes |
|
75/2, p. 247 |
MARIANNE AILES |
"DOON DE NANTEUIL" AND THE EPIC OF REVOLT |
|
52/2, p. 247 |
D. Tecwyn Lloyd, Nicolas Jacobs |
The ‘Stanzas of the months’: maxims from late medieval Wales |
|
70/2, p. 250 |
ROGER DALRYMPLE |
THE LITERARY USE OF RELIGIOUS FORMULAE IN CERTAIN MIDDLE ENGLISH ROMANCES |
|
64/2, p. 250 |
PHILLIPA HARDMAN |
READING THE SPACES: PICTORIAL INTENTIONS IN THE THORNTON MSS, LINCOLN CATHEDRAL MS 91, AND BL MS ADD. 31042 |
|
63/2, p. 250 |
KANTIK GHOSH |
Logic and Lollardy |
|
76/2, p. 251 |
Lynette Muir |
KING ARTHUR'S NORTHERN CONQUESTS IN THE "LEGES ANGLORUM LONDONIIS COLLECTAE" |
|
37/3, p. 253 |
R.J. Lyall |
DUNBAR AND THE FRANCISCANS |
|
46/2, p. 253 |
D.A. Trotter |
THE INFLUENCE OF BIBLE COMMENTARIES ON OLD FRENCH BIBLE TRANSLATIONS |
|
56/2, p. 257 |
BENJAMIN T. HUDSON |
THE VIKING AND THE IRISHMAN |
|
60/2, p. 257 |
MERJA BLACK |
A scribal translation of Piers Plowman |
|
67/2, p. 257 |
JAKE WALSH MORRISSEY |
‘To al indifferent’: the virtues of Lydgate’s ‘Dietary’ |
|
84/2, p. 258 |
MICHAEL HANRAHAN |
Defamation as political contest during the reign of Richard II |
|
72/2, p. 259 |
Anthony P. Bale |
A Norfolk gentlewoman and Lydgatian patronage: Lady Sibylle Boys and her cultural environment |
|
78/2, p. 261 |
PHILLIPA HARDMAN |
A MEDIAEVAL "LIBRARY IN PARVO" |
|
47/2, p. 262 |
CYRIL EDWARDS |
TÔHUWĀBŌHÛ: THE "WESSOBRUNNER GEBET" AND ITS ANALOGUES |
|
53/2, p. 263 |
PRISCILLA J. BAWCUTT |
"PAMPHILUS DE AMORE" 'IN INGUSH TOUNG' |
|
64/2, p. 264 |
George Corbett |
The Christian ethics of Dante’s Purgatory |
|
83/1, p. 266 |
Corinne J. Saunders |
MALORY'S "BOOK OF HUNTYNGE": THE TRISTRAM SECTION OF THE "MORTE DARTHUR" |
|
62/2, p. 270 |
IVANA DJORDJEVIĆ |
Les Pruesses Gui: summarizing Gui de Warewic in London, College of Arms, MS Arundel 27 |
|
84/2, p. 279 |
PETER GOODALL |
CHAUCER'S 'BURGESSES' AND THE ALDERMEN OF LONDON |
|
50/2, p. 284 |
Peter J. Lucas |
TOWARDS AN INTERPRETATION OF "SIR LAUNFAL" WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO LINE 683 |
|
39/3, p. 291 |
SIÂN GRØNLIE |
‘No longer male and female’: redeeming women in the Icelandic conversion narratives |
|
75/2, p. 293 |
Brent A. Pitts |
La Terre des Sarazins: the summary version |
|
84/2, p. 297 |
ANDREW LYNCH |
‘Manly cowardyse’: Thomas Hoccleve’s peace strategy |
|
73/2, p. 306 |
M.R. Golding |
THE IMPORTANCE OF KEEPING 'TROUTHE' IN "THE FRANKLIN'S TALE" |
|
39/3, p. 306 |
Claudia Tardelli Terry |
Reading Aristotle through Dante: the case of Meteorologica in Francesco da Buti’s Commento |
|
86/2, p. 350 |