Medieval England's specific political and linguistic history encompasses a great number of significant changes, some of the most disruptive of which were occasioned by the Norman Conquest. The alliterative proverb, with roots in Old English and continued vitality in Middle English, serves as a unique verbal icon allowing exploration of cultural conditions both before and after the Conquest. As a durable yet flexible form, the proverb remained just as important in the fifteenth century as it was in the sixth. The proverb has been an underutilized resource in tracing the linguistic and...
Medieval England's specific political and linguistic history encompasses a great number of significant changes, some of the most disruptive of which w...