Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Note on the texts
- Introduction
- Part I The early phase
- Part II The late nineteenth century
- Part III The Skeat aftermath
- Part IV Chambers and Grattan, Knott and Fowler
- 12 Chambers 1909–1910
- 13 Chambers versus Knott
- 14 Chambers' graduate students
- 15 Chambers 1931
- 16 Chambers 1935–1942
- 17 The Chambers and Grattan collations
- 18 Grattan and Kane
- 19 Knott and Fowler, Donaldson, Mitchell, and Russell
- Part V The Athlone Press edition
- Part VI Epilogue: the Athlone aftermath: Schmidt, Pearsall, Rigg-Brewer, et al.
- Works cited
- General index
- Index of manuscripts
- CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
14 - Chambers' graduate students
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Note on the texts
- Introduction
- Part I The early phase
- Part II The late nineteenth century
- Part III The Skeat aftermath
- Part IV Chambers and Grattan, Knott and Fowler
- 12 Chambers 1909–1910
- 13 Chambers versus Knott
- 14 Chambers' graduate students
- 15 Chambers 1931
- 16 Chambers 1935–1942
- 17 The Chambers and Grattan collations
- 18 Grattan and Kane
- 19 Knott and Fowler, Donaldson, Mitchell, and Russell
- Part V The Athlone Press edition
- Part VI Epilogue: the Athlone aftermath: Schmidt, Pearsall, Rigg-Brewer, et al.
- Works cited
- General index
- Index of manuscripts
- CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
Summary
One of the important observations that Knott had made in his 1915 article was that establishing a text of A was contingent upon establishing a text of B. Chambers and Grattan had explicitly recognised the truth of this remark: ‘So inter-related are the texts, that before you can have a final A-text, you must have an adequate B- and C-text.’ This crucial point is one that has seriously bedevilled Piers Plowman textual investigation, for reasons that become distressingly evident as familiarity with the manuscripts increases: if editing A requires prior editing of B (and C), then by the same token editing B (and C) requires prior editing of A and C (or A and B). The circularity of these requirements is daunting, and at the very least means that the editorial project is destined to eat up a good deal of time. Almost certainly one of the reasons why Chambers' editing of A stretched out over so many years, and seemed ultimately to lose impetus, is that he realised the strength of Knott's observation that, given the insecurity of Skeat's text of B (and by implication C), decisions on editing A made with the help of these two editions could only be provisional: once the three texts had been edited in the first place, it would be necessary to start all over again (see p. 244 above).
Chambers addressed the problem of B at an early stage, setting to work a remarkably able graduate student, Elsie Blackman, on a study of the poem.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Editing Piers PlowmanThe Evolution of the Text, pp. 256 - 271Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996