The Prologue from Chaucer's Canterbury TalesHoughton Mifflin, 1899 - 61 pages |
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... lord ! this hous in alle tymes Was full of shipmen and pilgrymes , With scrippes bret - ful of lesynges , Entremedled with tidynges , And eek alone by hemselve . O , many a thousand tymes twelve Saw I of these pardoneres Currours ...
... lord ! this hous in alle tymes Was full of shipmen and pilgrymes , With scrippes bret - ful of lesynges , Entremedled with tidynges , And eek alone by hemselve . O , many a thousand tymes twelve Saw I of these pardoneres Currours ...
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... Lord Jhesu Crist , and his blisful mooder and alle the Seintes of hevene , " etc. These are honest words ; and , had they come out of a passing black mood , they would hardly have survived the mood itself . They are the words of a man ...
... Lord Jhesu Crist , and his blisful mooder and alle the Seintes of hevene , " etc. These are honest words ; and , had they come out of a passing black mood , they would hardly have survived the mood itself . They are the words of a man ...
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... lord was kepere of the celle ; " 1 and the very whistling of the wind is in the second line with its thin " i " and " " sounds and its reso- nant " n's . " Or in the description of the Miller — е - " He was short - sholdered , brood , a ...
... lord was kepere of the celle ; " 1 and the very whistling of the wind is in the second line with its thin " i " and " " sounds and its reso- nant " n's . " Or in the description of the Miller — е - " He was short - sholdered , brood , a ...
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... bears the sins and sorrows of a whole coun- tryside , and bears them patiently and gladly for his Lord's sake . The man riding at his side resembles Ր 1 1 : rendered to his neighbor as to himself . So we. THE PROLOGUE lvii ...
... bears the sins and sorrows of a whole coun- tryside , and bears them patiently and gladly for his Lord's sake . The man riding at his side resembles Ր 1 1 : rendered to his neighbor as to himself . So we. THE PROLOGUE lvii ...
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... lord he fleeces , or the fellow - knave he terrorizes . He rides last of all , that he may se and not be seen , while the only pleasant touch in hi portrait is the background , a tidy farm house shadowe with " grene trees . " The ...
... lord he fleeces , or the fellow - knave he terrorizes . He rides last of all , that he may se and not be seen , while the only pleasant touch in hi portrait is the background , a tidy farm house shadowe with " grene trees . " The ...
Other editions - View all
The Prologue from Chaucer's Canterbury Tales Frank Jewett Mather,Geoffrey Chaucer No preview available - 2016 |
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berd bere bigan Boccaccio Boethius Canterbury Canterbury Tales Chau Chaucer Chauntecleer Chriseyde cock compaignye Compleynt Courtepy Crist doon dream Emily English Everich eyen fair Fame French Friars Geoffrey Chaucer greet grene hath heed herte Hous humor imper Italian Knight's Tale lady leet Legende litel lond lord lover Miss Petersen moche myghte noght Nun's Priest's Tale Palamon and Arcite Pandarus Pardoner Parlement of Foules Pertelote Petrarch pilgrims pleyn poem poet povre Prioress Prologue queen reader ride riden rime rood semed seyde seynt shal sholde Skeat Somnour song speke story style swich syllable Tabard tell temple Teseide Teseo ther therto Thomas à Becket thyng tion tournament translation trewely Troilus tyme unto Venus verse Vulpes Wel coude weren weye whan Wife of Bath withouten wolde word worthy yeer
Popular passages
Page 11 - Up-on his feet, and in his hand a staf. This noble ensample to his sheep he yaf, That first he wroghte, and afterward he taughte; Out of the gospel he tho wordes caughte; And this figure he added eek ther-to, That if gold ruste, what shal iren do?
Page 1 - And sikerly she was of greet disport, And ful plesaunt, and amiable of port, And peyned hir to countrefete chere Of court, and been estatlich of manere, And to ben holden digne of reverence.
Page 7 - But al be that he was a philosophre, Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre...
Page 11 - Now is nat that of God a ful fair grace, That swich a lewed mannes wit shal pace The wisdom of an heep of lerned men?
Page 7 - For sothe he was a worthy man with-alle, But sooth to seyn, I noot how men him calle. A CLERK ther was of Oxenford also, That un-to logik hadde longe y-go.