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Updated: May 16, 2025


And Chatty, who had no confidence to give, whose little story was all locked in her own bosom, had been fretted by her sister's questions, and by Mr. Eustace Thynne's repeated references to the fact that she "looked pale." "No, my dear. We were talking of you, that was all. Minnie is anxious that you should see a little more of the world." "Mamma, be correct at least.

Professor Herford quotes a passage from the Prologue of the Canterbury Tales as it appears in Thynne's second edition , which Spenser would inevitably have read as follows: This certainly bears on the face of it a close resemblance to Spenser's measure.

Speight in his life of Chaucer, printed in 1602, mentions a tale in William Thynne's first printed book of Chaucer's works more odious to the clergy than the Plowman's Tale. One thing must not be omitted concerning the works of Chaucer.

Thynne's advice, and that he entirely agreed with her, and thought she was quite right about Lady Markland, Chatty's spirit rose. "I would not talk about Theo to any one," she said, indignantly. "Who do you call any one? Mr. Thynne takes a great interest in all of us, and he is a clergyman, and of whom should one ask advice if not of a clergyman?" Minnie replied, with triumphant logic.

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