Crossword-Solution: LANGLAND 8 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 10

We have 1 clue for the answer “LANGLAND”

Clue Answers
"Piers Plowman" poet, possibly 1 answer
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Hint 1 meaning
To cause to flow in a stream, as a liquid or anything flowing like a liquid, either out of a vessel or into it; as, to pour water from a pail; to pour wine into a decanter; to pour oil upon the waters; to pour out sand or dust.
Hint 2 anagram
OURP
Hint 3 another clue
Stream
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Sentences with LANGLAND (5)

There is a third element in the literature of this time which you may call Lollard poetry, the great example of which is William Langland’s “Piers Plowman.” It is no bad corrective to Chaucer, and in _form_ at least belongs wholly to the popular side; but it seems to me to show symptoms of the spirit of the rising middle class, and casts before it the shadow of the new master that was coming forward for the workman’s oppression.
Signs of Change William Morris 2014
But from the sorely-tried third quarter of the fourteenth century the solitary voice of Langland cries, as the voice of Conscience preaching with her cross, that "these pestilences" are the penalty of sin and of naught else.
Chaucer Adolphus William Ward 2003
The melancholy thought which pervades Langland's "Vision" is still that of the helplessness of the poor; and the remedy to which he looks against the corruption of the governing classes is the advent of a superhuman king, whom he identifies with the ploughman himself, the representative of suffering humility.
Chaucer Adolphus William Ward 2003
This worthy, who lays bare his own motives with unparalleled cynical brutality, is manifestly drawn from the life;--or the portrait could not have been accepted which was presented alike by Chaucer, and by his contemporary Langland, and (a century and a half later) in the plagiarism of the orthodox Catholic John Heywood.
Chaucer Adolphus William Ward 2003
Already in the French "Roman de la Rose" the rivalry between the Friars and the Parish Priests is the theme of much satire, evidently unfavourable to the former and favourable to the latter; but in England, where Langland likewise dwells upon the jealousy between them, it was specially accentuated by the assaults of Wyclif upon the Mendicant Orders.
Chaucer Adolphus William Ward 2003
Where this answer appears

Appears in: NYT.

Used 1 time in crossword archives (1988).