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Chaucer portrait in MS Harley 4866 (Hoccleve’s Regement of Princes, c
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Chaucer’s portrait in the Ellesmere MS (c.1410)
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Chaucer’s tomb in Westminster Abbey (1556)
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British Library, MS Lansdowne 851 (The Canterbury Tales, c. 1425)
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Richard II, King of England 1377-99
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The opening of The Canterbury Tales in the Ellesmere MS
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Chaucer portrait in the Ellesmere MS (c. 1410)
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Some Pilgrim portraits from the Ellesmere MS (c.1410)
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Some Pilgrim portraits from the Ellesmere MS (c.1410)
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Some Pilgrim portraits from the Ellesmere MS (c.1410)
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Some Pilgrim portraits from the Ellesmere MS (c.1410)
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Pilgrim Groups in the General Prologue (in order of appearance)
Knight Squire Yeoman Prioresse Nun Priest (s) Monk Friar Merchant Clerk Man of Law Franklin 5 Guildsmen Cook Shipman Physician Wife Parson Plowman Miller Manciple Reeve Summoner Pardoner
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Pilgrim Groups in the General Prologue (arranged by traditional estate)
Knight Squire Prioresse Nun Priest (s) Monk Friar Parson Summoner Pardoner Merchant Clerk Man of Law Franklin 5 Guildsmen Cook Shipman Physician Wife Miller Manciple Reeve Yeoman Plowman
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The opening lines of Piers Plowman (from a MS at Trinity College, Cambridge)
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The dreamer falls asleep
in Piers Plowman
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The Franklin’s Tale Franklin—a prosperous country gentleman; locally influential, landowning, but non-noble A “Breton lay”—i.e., Chaucer’s version of Marie de France’s genre A “rash promise” tale (cp. Decameron, 10,5)
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The Franklin’s Tale Franklin—a prosperous country gentleman; locally influential, landowning, but non-noble A “Breton lay”—i.e., Chaucer’s version of Marie de France’s genre A “rash promise” tale (cp. Decameron, 10,5) Dorigen’s list draws on St. Jerome’s Adversus Jovinianum (392 CE; a frequent source for Chaucer)
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The Franklin’s Tale Franklin—a prosperous country gentleman; locally influential, landowning, but non-noble A “Breton lay”—i.e., Chaucer’s version of Marie de France’s genre A “rash promise” tale (cp. Decameron, 10,5) Dorigen’s list draws on St. Jerome’s Adversus Jovinianum (392 CE; a frequent source for Chaucer) End with a demande d’amour or “question of love” (with the usual Chaucerian twist)
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The Franklin’s Tale Franklin—a prosperous country gentleman; locally influential, landowning, but non-noble A “Breton lay”—i.e., Chaucer’s version of Marie de France’s genre A “rash promise” tale (cp. Decameron, 10,5, Filocolo) Dorigen’s list draws on St. Jerome’s Adversus Jovinianum (392 CE; a frequent source for Chaucer) End with a demande d’amour or “question of love” (with the usual Chaucerian twist; cp. Filocolo:) Part of the “Marriage Debate” in the Canterbury Tales (Kittredge, 1912: the resolution of that debate, and Chaucer’s own solution?)
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The Franklin’s Tale Franklin—a prosperous country gentleman; locally influential, landowning, but non-noble A “Breton lay”—i.e., Chaucer’s version of Marie de France’s genre A “rash promise” tale (cp. Decameron, 10,5) Dorigen’s list draws on St. Jerome’s Adversus Jovinianum (392 CE; a frequent source for Chaucer) End with a demande d’amour or “question of love” (with the usual Chaucerian twist) Part of the “Marriage Debate” in the Canterbury Tales (Kittredge, 1912: the resolution of that debate, and Chaucer’s own solution?)
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From Boccaccio’s Filocolo:
“Then to conclude, the knight was more liberall that granted his honour than any of the others: and thinke this one thing, that the honour he gave was not to be againe recovered, the whiche happeneth not in many other thinges, as of battels, prowesse, and others like: for if they are at one time lost, they are recovered at an other, and the same is possible. Therefore this may suffice for answere unto your demaund.”
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