American professor of English literature (1865–1940)
John Matthews Manly (September 2, 1865 – April 2, 1940) was an American professor of English literature and philology at the University of Chicago. Manly specialized in the study of the works of William Shakespeare and Geoffrey Chaucer. His eight-volume work, The Text of the Canterbury Tales (1940), written in collaboration with his former student Edith Rickert, has been cited as a definitive study of Chaucer's works.[1]
In 1884, at the age of 19, Manly accepted a position at William Jewell College teaching Mathematics, which he held for five years. After taking his doctorate in 1890 and teaching Anglo-Saxon at Radcliffe for a year, Manly accepted a call to Brown University and became one of the chief members of the English staff there, until 1898.[3] He then accepted the department chair in English at the University of Chicago, which he maintained until retirement.[2]
^Koretsky, Allen C. (Spring 1970). "Chaucer's Use of the Apostrophe in "Troilus and Criseyde"". The Chaucer Review. 4 (4): 242–266. JSTOR25093132. (Manly was the first American to give a Warton Lecture.)