. Aucassin and Nicolette;. of the wretched grief of two fairchildren small. With the sense ofthat there is no quarrelling; the de-light and the grief of Aucassin andNicolete are the very subject of thestory. The greatest objection isthat there is as little authority forduel as for the life-story of the oldwretch. Minor objections are thatdu duel (even when we make, as thescansion demands, a monosyllable ofduel) is a jangle that this particularauthor would not have allowed him-self, especially at the very beginningof his tale ; and that there is, appar-ently, no authority for the use of caitifa


. Aucassin and Nicolette;. of the wretched grief of two fairchildren small. With the sense ofthat there is no quarrelling; the de-light and the grief of Aucassin andNicolete are the very subject of thestory. The greatest objection isthat there is as little authority forduel as for the life-story of the oldwretch. Minor objections are thatdu duel (even when we make, as thescansion demands, a monosyllable ofduel) is a jangle that this particularauthor would not have allowed him-self, especially at the very beginningof his tale ; and that there is, appar-ently, no authority for the use of caitifas an adjective with an abstract noun. XXXVll 1$. kiO<# S 7 J \/\ 5. tit Cab «f


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Keywords: ., bookauth, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidcu31924027270127