GOOD CONDITIONS
From back cover:
This opening volume of "The Penguin History of Literature" begins with the earliest surviving documents of literary importance, dating from around 800 AD.
It ends with the works of writers such as John Skelton, William Dunbar and Thomas Malory, whose careers were well established before the accession of Henry VIII in 1509. Eight chapters are contributed by ten scholars in the field. They explore the birth of an island literature conceived before the invention of printing, its language borrowed from Germany, its impulse imported from Rome. Generous space is devoted to Chaucer, and there are chapters on Old English and on the popular and courtly poetry and prose of the period. The editor provides an introduction to conditions in the Middle Ages, together with a full bibliography and a tables of dates.
Published in ten volumes, "The Penguin History of Literature" is a critical survey of English and American literature covering 14 centuries, from the Anglo-Saxons to the present, and written by some of the most distinguished academics in their fields.
This volume was previously published as part of the Sphere History of Literature series.
Contents:
pag. IX INTRODUCTION
1 1. THE CONDITIONS OF LITERARY COMPOSITION IN MEDIEVAL ENGLAND, W. F. Bolton
29 2. THE OLD ENGLISH PERIOD, J. E. Cross
81 3. EARLY MIDDLE ENGLISH LITERATURE, G. T. Shepherd
119 4. ALLITERATIVE POETRY IN THE FOURTEENTH AND FIFTEENTH CENTURIES, D. J. Williams
5. CHAUCER
169 I. Chaucer's Life, W. F. Bolton
172 II. The Minor Poems and the Prose, S. S. Hussey
204 III. Troilus and Criseyde, D. S. Brewer
237 IV. The Canterbury Tales, D. A. Pearsall
267 6. LATER POETRY: THE POPULAR TRADITION, Rosemary Woolf
313 7. LATER POETRY: THE COURTLY TRADITION, Douglas Gray
369 8. LATE MEDIEVAL PROSE, N. F. Blake
401 BIBLIOGRAPHY
423 TABLE OF DATES
429 INDEX