Geoffrey Chaucer — "And certeinly, as I have herd it tolde, / Ther was no wight that he ne ferde as …"
And certeinly, as I have herd it tolde, / Ther was no wight that he ne ferde as a folde.
And certeinly, as I have herd it tolde, / Ther was no wight that he ne ferde as a folde.
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"But al be that he was a philosophre, / Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre."
"This somnour bar to hym a stif burdoun; / Was nevere trompe of half so greet a soun."
"And he hadde been somtyme in chyvachie / In Flaundres, in Artoys, and Pycardie, / And born hym wel, as of so litel space."
"She koude muchel of wandrynge by the weye. / Gat-tothed was she, soothly for to seye."
"His nekke whit was as the flour-de-lys, Thereto strong he was as a champioun."
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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