Geoffrey Chaucer — "He knew hir conseil, and hir pryvetee, And for to been a maister of his craft, F…"
He knew hir conseil, and hir pryvetee, And for to been a maister of his craft, Ful ofte hadde this man bigiled his maister.
He knew hir conseil, and hir pryvetee, And for to been a maister of his craft, Ful ofte hadde this man bigiled his maister.
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"The Wife of Bath... had set widely 'gap-teeth'."
"And al be that he was a worthy man, He loved gold in special."
"For he hadde yeve his lord, and that of grace, The pleyn felicitee of his richesse."
"The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne, Th'assay so hard, so sharp the conquerynge."
"For though the lyon be a beest, He hath a herte of gold, and that is al."
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.
The Canterbury Tales, General Prologue (describing the Reeve's ability to deceive his master)
Date: c. 1387-1400
GeneralFound in 1 providers: gemini
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