The parlament of foules, by Geoffrey Chaucer. Ed., with introduction, notes, and glossary, by T. R. Lounsbury.

6 INTROD UC TIO. accordingly referred by Godwin to the year 1358. In this he has been followed by several modern writers. This date is now almost contemptuously rejected by those students of Chaucer, forming, perhaps, a majority of the whole number, who have given up the traditional date of 1328 as the year of the poet's birth, and have substituted for it a conjectural one of I340, or thereabouts. Still their views as to its time of composition cannot be looked upon as resting upon any firmer basis than that of Godwin's. The only conspicuous theory, indeed the only one deserving of any attention, is that of Prof. Ten Brink of the University of Strasbourg. In I870 he published a valuable treatise on Chaucer, in which he divided his works into three periods; the first embracing those written exclusively under French influence; the second, those written specially under Italian influence; and the third period, from 1385 to I400. The second period he began with the poet's return, in 1373, from his first Italian journey of which we have any record; for we know from official documents, that shortly after the Ist of December, 1372, Chaucer left England on a diplomatic mission to Genoa, and came back to England some time before the 22d of November, I373. To this second period, extending from this time to 1385, Prof. Ten Brink assigned the composition of " Palamon and Arcite," of " The Hous of Fame," of " Troylus and Cryseyde," 'of "The Life of Seint Cecile," and of "The Parlament of Foules." All of these exhibit traces of Italian influence; all of them are more or less indebted to Italian originals, and are, therefore, supposed to have been written after the return of the poet from a journey, in which he had come into personal contact with Italian speakers, perhaps with Italian authors, and had had, in consequence, special facilities for the study of the language. Mr. Furnivall, the director of the Chaucer Society, has adopted this theory, and is inclined to assign the composition of this particular poem to the year I374. There is nothing impossible about any of these statements; ancfthey certainly cannot be disproved, for the very good reason, that, in the present state of our knowledge, they cannot be proved. There are, however, two weak points in the

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Title
The parlament of foules, by Geoffrey Chaucer. Ed., with introduction, notes, and glossary, by T. R. Lounsbury.
Author
Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400.
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Page 6
Publication
Boston,: Ginn & Heath
1877.

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"The parlament of foules, by Geoffrey Chaucer. Ed., with introduction, notes, and glossary, by T. R. Lounsbury." In the digital collection Making of America Books. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/acr7356.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2025.
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