The Tale of the Man of Lawe, the Pardoneres Tale, the Second Nonnes Tale, the Chanouns Yemannes Tale, From the Canterbury Tales 3

Cover The Tale of the Man of Lawe, the Pardoneres Tale, the Second Nonnes Tale, the Chanouns Yemannes Tale, From the Canterbury Tales 3
The Tale of the Man of Lawe, the Pardoneres Tale, the Second Nonnes Tale, the Chanouns Yemannes Tale, From the Canterbury Tales 3
Chaucer Geoffrey
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L 58. Flemed tvrecche, banished exile. The proper sense of A. S.
wracca is an exile, a stranger ; and thence, a miserable being, an exile.
The phrase ' fleming of wrecches,' i.e. banishment of the miserable, occurs in Chaucer*s Troilus, iii. 935 (ed. Tyrwhitt). And see above, B. 460.
Galle, bitterness. There is probably an allusion to the name Mary, and to the Hebrew mar, fem. marah, bitter. Cf. Exod. xv. 23 ; Acts viii, 23 ; Ruth i. 20, Cf. Chaucer's ABC, I, 5a !• 59. IVomman Cananee, a transl
...ation of mulier Chananaa in the Vulgate version of Mat. xv. 23. Wyclif calls her *a womman of Canane.* 1. 60. Compare Wyclif 's version — * for whelpis eten of the crummes that fallen doun fro the bord of her lordis ; ' Mat. xv. 27.
1. 62. Sone of Eue, son of Eve, i.e. the author himself. This, as Tyrwhitt remarks (Introd. Discourse, note 30), is a clear proof that the Tale was never properly revised to suit it for the collection. The expression is unsuitable for the supposed narrator, the Second Nun.


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