Chaucer Gallery
idfuckgarrettnickelsen
murdorkatlaw
isabella chrystin
knittergirl80
ninjacuddlingmonster
“Chaucer reciting”,frontispiece of Troilus and Criseyde,early 15th c.
Ms. Codex 348 -Alcune novelle di Messer Giovanni BoccaccioWritten in Naples (Italy) in 1731, this ma
remindmeofthe:boneycircus:milesedgworth:Remember that time Jarvis, King Robert Baratheon, The Joker
This involved a lot of mathematics and photo editing skills, both of which I don't posses, but here
likeniobe:best part of the knight’s tale is when he starts just listing different kinds of trees
mediumaevum:Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote,The droghte of March hath perced to the roote,A
macrolit:The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer
bodleianlibs:WHAN that Aprille with his shoures soote The droghte of Marche hath perced to the roote
argonauticae:none of this is going in my dissertation but
zombeesknees:#can people stop hiring paul bettany to be ice cold and whispery #and hire him again t
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood » Topsy and Ned (William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones)
‘The Chaucer Astrolabe’On display at the British MuseumDating to 1326 and of English origin, this is
This is actually a Chaucer reference
design-is-fine:Eric Gill, wood engraved title-page for Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde, 1927.
english-idylls:Warwick Goble’s illustration of The Book of the Duchess by Geoffrey Chaucer.
Pier Paolo Pasolini as Geoffrey Chaucer, in The Canterbury Tales (1972).
While there is still speculation, the current decided death date of Geoffrey Chaucer is on this day,
argonauticae:none of this is going in my dissertation but
reallybadblackoutpoems: the canterbury tales (c. 1400) - geoffrey chaucer“hot wench summer”
uutpoetry:Flurry of AlphabetsA flurry of alphabets.A stone stuck in the Registrar’s office.Chaucer s
literaery-me:The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer (Retelling by Peter Ackroyd)
The Ellesmere ChaucerThe Wife of BathMiddle and Modern English here.via digitalassets.lib.berkeley.e
solarbird:dharmagun:be he stronge? list ye, buddehe hath straunge chymerical blod!swyngeth he from a
the-evil-clergyman: Canacee and the Falcon, from The Complete Poetical Works of Geoffrey Chaucer by
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