Geoffrey Chaucer — "A wife destroys her husband and contrives, As husbands know, the ruin of their l…"
A wife destroys her husband and contrives, As husbands know, the ruin of their lives.
A wife destroys her husband and contrives, As husbands know, the ruin of their lives.
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"Of his complexioun he was sangwyn."
"She koude muchel of wandrynge by the weye. / Gat-tothed was she, soothly for to seye."
"He wolde make a good confessorie, / If a man had a soule, and that he were / A good man, and coude wel here / Confessiouns, and have a good memorie."
"And everich was worth to been an alderman, / For they hadde ynough of catel and of rente."
"For in this world, certein, no wight there is, That he ne hath som favour in his sight."
English poet, civil servant, and the father of English literature; The Canterbury Tales (~1387-1400) is the founding text of English-language storytelling. Closely associated with Giovanni Boccaccio (his Italian predecessor; the Decameron preceded the Canterbury Tales by ~40 years). For an intellectual contrast, see John Wycliffe, English theologian and Lollard reform-movement leader — Wycliffe and Chaucer were near-contemporaries in the same English Christian world — Chaucer's Wife of Bath and Pardoner are the canonical literary defense of fleshly humanity against the Lollard moral austerity that would later become English Puritanism. Earthy storytelling vs proto-Protestant moralism.
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