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Fortune

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ballade

ballade  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
Strictly a poem consisting of one or more triplets of seven‐ or (afterwards) eight‐lined stanzas, each ending with the same line as refrain, and usually an envoy addressed to a prince or his ...
Boethius

Boethius  

(c. 480–524),Roman statesman and philosopher, best known for The Consolation of Philosophy, which he wrote while in prison on a charge of treason. He argued that the soul can attain happiness in ...
Book of the Duchess

Book of the Duchess  

A dream‐poem in 1,334 lines by Chaucer, probably written in 1369, in octosyllabic couplets. It is believed to be an allegorical lament on the death of Blanche of Lancaster, the first wife of John of ...
Carvilius Maximus, Spurius

Carvilius Maximus, Spurius  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(RE 9)of non-senatorial origins, was consul twice (293; 272 bc) with L. Papirius Cursor (2). Both secured triumphs for decisive victories in northern central Samnium (293) and for ending ...
causation

causation  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Law
N.The relationship between an act and the consequences it produces. It is one of the elements that must be proved before an accused can be convicted of a crime in which the effect of the act is part ...
Cenobia

Cenobia  

Queen of Palmyra (Palymerie) in Syria, who succeeded her husband Odenathus (Odenake) in ad 266 or 267 and, in spite of the fact that her city had long enjoyed the ...
Clerk's Tale

Clerk's Tale  

Is the first tale in Fragment IV of the Canterbury Tales, and is followed immediately by the Merchant's Tale. In the Prologue (in couplets) the Clerk is asked to tell ...
consolation

consolation  

The practice of offering words of comfort to those afflicted by grief is reflected in the earliest Greek poetry. Later, under the twin influences of rhetoric and philosophy, a specialized consolatory ...
Croesus

Croesus  

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Overview Page
(6th century bc),last king of Lydia c. 560–546bc. Renowned for his great wealth, he subjugated the Greek cities on the coast of Asia Minor before being overthrown by Cyrus the Great.
dream vision

dream vision  

A kind of narrative (usually but not always in verse) in which the narrator falls asleep and dreams the events of the tale. The story is often a kind of allegory, and commonly consists of a tour of ...
Fame

Fame  

(see also House of Fame). The word (like its original, L. fama) had a number of related senses which Chaucer plays with. (1) It can mean ‘renown’: thus, the ‘fame’ ...
fate

fate  

Reference type:
Overview Page
A fate worse than death rape; the term is recorded from the early 19th century, although earlier in the mid 17th century Dorothy Osborne in a letter refers to ‘the Roman courage, when they killed ...
fool

fool  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
All Fools' Day a humorous term for 1 April as a day for testing the credulity of others; recorded from the early 18th century, and probably modelled on All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day.fools and ...
Fortuna

Fortuna   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2004

The Roman personification of fortune, luck, and chance appears frequently in ancient Celtic iconography, although she is not recorded as

Fortuna

Fortuna (Europe)   Quick reference

A Dictionary of World Mythology

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2003

An Italian goddess identified with the Greek goddess of luck Tyche, ‘child of Zeus the Deliverer’. The Greeks thought that

Fortuna/Fors

Fortuna/Fors   Reference library

Nicholas Purcell

The Oxford Classical Dictionary (4 ed.)

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2012
Subject:
Classical studies, History
Length:
405 words
the goddess of Chance or Luck, Greek *Tyche, of great importance in Italian and Roman religion, but not thought by the Romans to be part of the oldest stratum of their religious system (no ... More
Fortune

Fortune   Reference library

The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2010
Subject:
Classical studies, History
Length:
1,658 words

The Greek goddess Tyche, and her Roman counterpart Fortuna, represented, at the most basic level, good or bad luck, the

Fortune

Fortune   Reference library

The Oxford Companion to Chaucer

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2005

In Roman religion there was a goddess Fortuna (of fortune, luck, or fate), with temples dedicated to her. She was

Fortune

Fortune  

One of Chaucer's ‘Boethian’ lyrics, is a triple ballade, surviving in ten MSS. It is sometimes entitled ‘Balades de Visage sanz Peinture’, a rather mysterious description. It may mean ‘ballades ...
fortune

fortune   Quick reference

The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (2 ed.)

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2006

chance or luck as a power in human affairs, often personified (Fortune) as a goddess; the word comes (in Middle English, via Old French) from Latin ...

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