home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!spool.mu.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!eff!mnemonic
- From: mnemonic@eff.org (Mike Godwin)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Subject: Re: Chaucer. Was non-Rabelaisian farts
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.163906.6103@eff.org>
- Date: 28 Dec 92 16:39:06 GMT
- References: <1hn95jINNf59@morrow.stanford.edu>
- Sender: usenet@eff.org (NNTP News Poster)
- Organization: Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Lines: 48
- Originator: mnemonic@eff.org
- Nntp-Posting-Host: eff.org
-
- In article <1hn95jINNf59@morrow.stanford.edu> francis@oas.stanford.edu (Francis Muir) writes:
-
- >And to me a source of some pain that Godwin does not know Chaucer.
-
- A very Fido-like response, but not based in anything I wrote. It will
- be recalled that the most I said was that the fart humor in "The Miller's
- Tale" could be called "Rabelaisian."
-
- >The
- >fact of the matter is that while an understanding of American literature
- >might get by quite nicely without understanding Chaucer, that is not the
- >case with English literature which, even up to the present day, is
- >influenced more by Geoffrey Chaucer than any other writer not excluding
- >William Shakespeare.
-
- I'd say Shakespeare was more influential than Chaucer, but that has mostly
- to do with the changes in English between Chaucer's century and
- Shakespeare's.
-
- >The *The Miller's Tale* is much, much more than a
- >tale of a fart ....
-
- Where did I dispute this? The fact that you are trying to attribute
- the contrary view to me suggests that you have a lot of extra time
- on your hands over the semester break.
-
- > ... and *The Miller's Tale* is but a small part of *The
- >Canterbury Tales*, which is astonishingly broad in its display of the
- >human experience.
-
- Well, of course, Fido. But careful readers will have noted that I
- never purported to say anything different about THE CANTERBURY TALES from
- what you write in this sentence.
-
- Anyway, thanks for sharing your familiarity with Chaucer, even if
- you insist on using my purported unfamiliarity with Chaucer as an
- excuse to do so.
-
-
- --Mike
-
-
-
- --
- Mike Godwin, |"I'm waiting for the one-man revolution
- mnemonic@eff.org| The only one that's coming."
- (617) 864-0665 |
- EFF, Cambridge | --Robert Frost
-