Geoffrey Chaucer — "For whoso wol no wyf, he is no man."
For whoso wol no wyf, he is no man.
For whoso wol no wyf, he is no man.
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"A good wyf was ther, of biside Bathe, But she was somdel deef, and that was scathe."
"For pitee renneth soone in gentil herte."
"A man shal fynde, that in his lyf, The gretteste joye is to have a wyf."
"A good felawe, ye, a verray charitee!"
"For in his male he hadde a pilwe-beer, / Which that he seyde was Oure Lady veyl."
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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