Apparently, Chaucer was fond of eating the berries of the commonly known guelder rose but most find them bitter and smelly. |
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But for a poet concerned with scansion, as Chaucer was, that weak ending the final e offered was a blessing. |
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In English literature, satire may be held to have begun with Chaucer, who was followed by many 15th-cent. writers, including Dunbar. |
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Because of her obnoxious attitude Chaucer makes her toothless, fat and large. |
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To play Geoffrey Chaucer in A Knight's Tale, he made his entrance stark naked. |
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No record remains of the education that gave Chaucer lifelong familiarity with Latin and several vernacular languages and literatures. |
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Of the Middle English poets, Chaucer is the one who displays most knowledge of wine, although he tends to mention different wines only briefly. |
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The moment my exams were over, I put down the Shakespeare and Chaucer, and started reading trashy horror novels. |
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With a deftness of touch reminiscent of Chaucer, Map achieves a high degree of realism through the pretense of reporting direct speech. |
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In this prologue, Chaucer introduces all of the characters who are involved in this imaginary journey and who will tell the tales. |
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If Chaucer were alive today, and armed with a shotgun, there wouldn't be a jury in the land who'd convict. |
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I've sent some 30 copies of my Chaucer piece to editors, literary men, Chaucerian scholars. |
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There are also extensive references in Hopkins's writings to Old and Middle English, in particular to Chaucer. |
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It is interesting that Thomas Chaucer chose his maternal Roet arms over his paternal Chaucer arms, these being parti per pale, a bend over all. |
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Along the way Gray offers idiosyncratic commentaries on Chaucer, Pepys, Gibbon, Milton and Burns. |
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Though it is the painful season of Christ's agony and death, it belongs in Chaucer to the elemental happiness rising from the resurrecting earth. |
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The poem is significant, as well as for the charm of its prologue, for the fact that it is the first attested use of the heroic couplet in Chaucer. |
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She brings up many a valid point throughout the prologue but Chaucer voids her opinion because of her social class and looks when in truth she is actually wise. |
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She did indeed go to Harvard, where she majored in English and delighted in reading Chaucer in Old English. |
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Chaucer sympathizes with her because he himself was considered low-class. |
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So for the 12 years he spent at Aldgate, Chaucer was mostly alone, with a teeming urban scene literally beneath his feet. |
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Brilliant as an exponent of the virtues in Spenser, Dante, Chaucer, Lewis could not write his own poetry. |
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How can a devotee of Chaucer feel otherwise when the liturgy recalls what the church historically is-a parade of human beings fallible and peccable? |
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Chaucer used octosyllabic lines in House of Fame but eschewed iambic rhythm. |
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The following is the very beginning of the General Prologue from The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. |
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In Troilus and Criseyde Chaucer draws heavily on his source, Boccaccio, and on the late Latin philosopher Boethius. |
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It is in this role that Chaucer receives some of his earliest critical praise. |
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In 1385 Thomas Usk made glowing mention of Chaucer, and John Gower, Chaucer's main poetic rival of the time, also lauded him. |
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This change in the pronunciation of English, still not fully understood, makes the reading of Chaucer difficult for the modern audience. |
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Chaucer is sometimes considered the source of the English vernacular tradition. |
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The story did not originate in the works of Chaucer and was well known in the 14th century. |
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Chaucer for years before the Prologue to LGW had been writing heroic couplets at the close of each of his rhymes royal. |
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The figures in the spandrils of the arch symbolize the overthrow through Chaucer of the Saxon bard and the Norman troubadour. |
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He writes from a classicising impulse, treating Chaucer as the renaissance humanists treated the classical writers. |
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For one example, see the discussion of a virelay of Guillaume de Machaut in my Chaucer and His French Contemporaries. |
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Many scholars say there is a good possibility Chaucer met Petrarch or Boccaccio. |
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Chaucer moves freely between all of these styles, showing favouritism to none. |
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Chaucer uses the same meter throughout almost all of his tales, with the exception of Sir Thopas and his prose tales. |
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It is unclear whether Chaucer would intend for the reader to link his characters with actual persons. |
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Instead, it appears that Chaucer creates fictional characters to be general representations of people in such fields of work. |
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Chaucer himself had fought in the Hundred Years' War under Edward III, who heavily emphasised chivalry during his reign. |
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Two tales, Sir Topas and The Tale of Melibee are told by Chaucer himself, who is travelling with the pilgrims in his own story. |
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It is unclear to what extent Chaucer was responsible for starting a trend rather than simply being part of it. |
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This makes it difficult to tell when Chaucer is writing to the fictional pilgrim audience or the actual reader. |
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Chaucer describes a Plowman in the General Prologue of his tales, but never gives him his own tale. |
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When Chaucer was sent as a diplomat to Italy in 1378, Gower was one of the men to whom he gave power of attorney over his affairs in England. |
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In the 16th century, he was generally regarded alongside Chaucer as the father of English poetry. |
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However, he has not obtained the same following or critical acceptance as Geoffrey Chaucer. |
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Outside were carved heads of Shakespeare and Milton, Chaucer and Dante. |
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It is difficult to find evidence that the poet shared knowledge of classical poets, such as Virgil and Ovid, with the likes of Chaucer. |
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Geoffrey Chaucer offered an allusion to such ball skills in fourteenth century England. |
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William Dunbar for instance referred to the English poets Chaucer, Lydgate and Gower as makaris. |
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Nevertheless, from the beginning of the 14th century, some authors chose to write in English, such as Geoffrey Chaucer. |
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Chaucer is considered to be the father of the English language and the creator of English as a literary language. |
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Chaucer Community Primary School serves the oldest part of the town, around the Mount. |
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In 1373 Geoffrey Chaucer visited and among the pilgrims in his Canterbury Tales. |
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The herdboy in the broom, already musical in the days of Father Chaucer, startles the lark with this exiguous pipe. |
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Middle English literature emerged with Geoffrey Chaucer, author of The Canterbury Tales, along with Gower, the Pearl Poet and Langland. |
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As a result, he founded the Early English Text Society in 1864 and the Chaucer Society in 1868 to publish old manuscripts. |
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The medieval English poet Chaucer describes his student as being happy by having. |
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The authors of the Parnassus plays at St John's College, Cambridge numbered him with Chaucer, Gower, and Spenser. |
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One of these was Geoffrey Chaucer, who was buried here as he had apartments in the abbey where he was employed as master of the King's Works. |
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Other poets, writers and musicians were buried or memorialised around Chaucer in what became known as Poets' Corner. |
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This resulted in Canterbury becoming a major place of pilgrimage and inspired the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. |
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In the fourteenth century major works of English literature began once again to appear, including the works of Chaucer. |
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Geoffrey Chaucer was born in London sometime around 1343, though the precise date and location of his birth remain unknown. |
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It is uncertain how many children Chaucer and Philippa had, but three or four are most commonly cited. |
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His son, Thomas Chaucer, had an illustrious career, as chief butler to four kings, envoy to France, and Speaker of the House of Commons. |
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On 12 July 1389, Chaucer was appointed the clerk of the king's works, a sort of foreman organising most of the king's building projects. |
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Chaucer was also appointed keeper of the lodge at the King's park in Feckenham, which was a largely honorary appointment. |
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It is believed that Chaucer stopped work on the Canterbury Tales sometime towards the end of this decade. |
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The last mention of Chaucer is on 5 June 1400, when some monies owed to him were paid. |
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Chaucer was buried in Westminster Abbey in London, as was his right owing to his status as a tenant of the Abbey's close. |
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In 1556, his remains were transferred to a more ornate tomb, making Chaucer the first writer interred in the area now known as Poets' Corner. |
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Two other early works by Chaucer were Anelida and Arcite and The House of Fame. |
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Chaucer is also recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary as the first author to use many common English words in his writings. |
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Thynne's canon brought the number of apocryphal works associated with Chaucer to a total of 28, even if that was not his intention. |
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The Testament of Love imitates, borrows from, and thus resembles Usk's contemporary, Chaucer. |
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What was added to Chaucer often helped represent him favourably to Protestant England. |
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The myth of the Protestant Chaucer continues to have a lasting impact on a large body of Chaucerian scholarship. |
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As with the Chaucer editions, it was critically significant to English Protestant identity and included Chaucer in its project. |
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Foxe's Chaucer both derived from and contributed to the printed editions of Chaucer's Works, particularly the pseudepigrapha. |
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The life of Chaucer prefixed to the volume was the work of the Reverend John Dart, corrected and revised by Timothy Thomas. |
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It was during these years that Chaucer began working on his most famous text, The Canterbury Tales. |
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It is unclear to what extent Chaucer was seminal in this evolution of literary preference. |
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While Chaucer clearly states the addressees of many of his poems, the intended audience of The Canterbury Tales is more difficult to determine. |
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Chaucer was a courtier, leading some to believe that he was mainly a court poet who wrote exclusively for nobility. |
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In 2004, Professor Linne Mooney claimed that she was able to identify the scrivener who worked for Chaucer as an Adam Pinkhurst. |
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Chaucer wrote in late Middle English, which has clear differences from Modern English. |
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From philological research, we know certain facts about the pronunciation of English during the time of Chaucer. |
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Chaucer was the first author to utilise the work of these last two, both Italians. |
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The day first became associated with romantic love in the circle of Geoffrey Chaucer in the High Middle Ages, when the tradition of courtly love flourished. |
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Chaucer imagines Custance's language as existing at a time before clerics were relied upon as the authoritative translators and glossers of Latin Scripture in England. |
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Geoffrey Chaucer wrote his narrative work The Canterbury Tales in a time of transition from vestigially oral culture to functionally literate print culture. |
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Fellow Lloyds of London outfits Novae Group and Chaucer Insurance have been touted by analysts as potential bid targets should Apollo back away from Brit. |
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Lastly, Chaucer does not pay much attention to the progress of the trip, to the time passing as the pilgrims travel, or to specific locations along the way to Canterbury. |
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Although Henry IV renewed the grants assigned to Chaucer by Richard, Chaucer's own The Complaint of Chaucer to his Purse hints that the grants might not have been paid. |
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In the Middle English period the use of regional dialects in writing proliferated, and dialect traits were even used for effect by authors such as Chaucer. |
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However, the speed with which copyists strove to write complete versions of his tale in manuscript form shows that Chaucer was a famous and respected poet in his own day. |
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Chaucer is a crucial figure in developing the legitimacy of the vernacular, Middle English, at a time when the dominant literary languages in England were French and Latin. |
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These words were probably frequently used in the language at the time but Chaucer, with his ear for common speech, is the earliest extant manuscript source. |
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The day first became associated with romantic love within the circle of Geoffrey Chaucer in the 14th century, when the tradition of courtly love flourished. |
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Chesterton, both William Shakespeare and Geoffrey Chaucer appear as characters, as do several characters from within A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Tempest. |
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No authorial, arguably complete version of the Tales exists and no consensus has been reached regarding the order in which Chaucer intended the stories to be placed. |
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Richard conducted restoration work on St George's Chapel, the work being carried out by Geoffrey Chaucer, who served as a diplomat and Clerk of The King's Works. |
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Although much of the text may have come from other sources, the treatise indicates that Chaucer was versed in science in addition to his literary talents. |
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The English imagination was fired by Greek mythology starting with Chaucer and John Milton and continuing through Shakespeare to Robert Bridges in the 20th century. |
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Speght is also the source of the famous tale of Chaucer being fined for beating a Franciscan friar in Fleet Street, as well as a fictitious coat of arms and family tree. |
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Some scholars thus find it unlikely that Chaucer had a copy of the work on hand, surmising instead that he must have merely read the Decameron at some point. |
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He survived the political upheavals caused by the Lords Appellants, despite the fact that Chaucer knew some of the men executed over the affair quite well. |
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However, it also seems to have been intended for private reading as well, since Chaucer frequently refers to himself as the writer, rather than the speaker, of the work. |
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In 1598, Francis Meres published his Palladis Tamia, a survey of English literature from Chaucer to its present day, within which twelve of Shakespeare's plays are named. |
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