ARDIS BUTTERFIELD |
LYRIC AND ELEGY IN "THE BOOK OF THE DUCHESS" |
|
60/1, p. 33 |
SUSAN CRANE |
FROISSART'S "DIT DOU BLEU CHEVALIER" AS A SOURCE FOR CHAUCER'S "BOOK OF THE DUCHESS" |
|
61/1, p. 59 |
Jane H.M. Taylor |
Inescapable rose: Jean le Seneschal's Cent Balades and the art of cheerful paradox |
|
67/1, p. 60 |
NICOLETTE ZEEMAN |
THE VERSE OF COURTLY LOVE IN THE FRAMING NARRATIVE OF THE "CONFESSIO AMANTIS" |
|
60/2, p. 222 |
Sylvia Huot |
PATIENCE IN ADVERSITY: THE COURTLY LOVER AND JOB IN MACHAUT'S MOTETS 2 AND 3 |
|
63/2, p. 222 |
James I. Wimsatt |
GUILLAUME DE MACHAUT AND CHAUCER'S "TROILUS AND CRISEYDE" |
|
|