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Chapter 1 - Glossing, Correcting, and Emending

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 June 2023

Devani Singh
Affiliation:
Université de Genève

Summary

This chapter discusses Chaucer’s language, the difficulties it posed for early modern readers, and the competing claims of superior accuracy and comprehensibility made by contemporary prints. Representing various texts in the Chaucer canon, the manuscripts discussed in this chapter have in common a unique aspect of their provenance – their words have all been corrected, glossed, or emended by different early modern annotators. Through analysis of hundreds of annotations in their manuscript context, the chapter argues that early modern readers sought to perfect the outmoded, error-prone, and sometimes illegible Chaucerian manuscript text, often on the basis of printed editions. These readerly interventions reveal contemporary anxieties about linguistic archaism and textual corruption, and strive to resolve them by recourse to glosses and readings contained in new books.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 1.1 Joseph Holland’s glossary adapted from Speght’s 1598 edition. CUL MS Gg.4.27(1), fol. 30r.

Reproduced by kind permission of the Syndics of Cambridge University Library.
Figure 1

Figure 1.2 Speght’s 1598 glossary. Fondation Martin Bodmer [without shelfmark], sig. 4A1r.

Digitised and reproduced courtesy of the Bodmer Lab, University of Geneva.
Figure 2

Figure 1.3 Seventeenth-century annotations in a copy of Troilus and Criseyde with reference to collation with ‘printed books’.

Cambridge, St John’s College, MS L.1, fol. 1v. By permission of the Master and Fellows of St John’s College, Cambridge.
Figure 3

Figure 1.4 Corrections inserted and written over erasures.

The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, Bodl. MS Laud Misc. 739, fol. 12r.

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