Book contents
- Transforming Early English
- Studies in English Language
- Transforming Early English
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- A Note on the Transcriptions
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 On Historical Pragmatics
- Chapter 2 Inventing the Anglo-Saxons
- Chapter 3 ‘Witnesses Preordained by God’: The Reception of Middle English Religious Prose
- Chapter 4 The Great Tradition: Langland, Gower, Chaucer
- Chapter 5 Forging the Nation: Reworking Older Scottish Literature
- Chapter 6 On Textual Transformations: Walter Scott and Beyond
- Appendix of Plates
- Bibliography
- Index of Manuscripts and Early Prints
- Subject Index
Chapter 4 - The Great Tradition: Langland, Gower, Chaucer
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 May 2020
- Transforming Early English
- Studies in English Language
- Transforming Early English
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- A Note on the Transcriptions
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 On Historical Pragmatics
- Chapter 2 Inventing the Anglo-Saxons
- Chapter 3 ‘Witnesses Preordained by God’: The Reception of Middle English Religious Prose
- Chapter 4 The Great Tradition: Langland, Gower, Chaucer
- Chapter 5 Forging the Nation: Reworking Older Scottish Literature
- Chapter 6 On Textual Transformations: Walter Scott and Beyond
- Appendix of Plates
- Bibliography
- Index of Manuscripts and Early Prints
- Subject Index
Summary
William Langland’s Piers Plowman, one of the greatest English poems of the late fourteenth century, was first printed in 1550. This edition was produced by Robert Crowley (c. 1517–88), who combined his short-lived commercial activities – supported, albeit without acknowledgement, by the king’s printer, Richard Grafton – with a longer career as a polemical author and reformed clergyman, active in the evangelical interest and inter alia a major source for the protestant martyrologist John Foxe. He has, perhaps a little over-enthusiastically, been described as ‘the most significant poet between Surrey and Gascoigne’ (King 1982: 320). Piers Plowman was Crowley’s most ambitious verse publication in terms of size, and was clearly a success for him. No fewer than three impressions (1550a–1550c) appeared in the same year, in a substantial quarto format; with the exception of an edition of the Psalter, all Crowley’s other publications were more modest octavos.
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- Transforming Early EnglishThe Reinvention of Early English and Older Scots, pp. 127 - 173Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020