Tumgik
#Chaucer Canterbury Tales
the-evil-clergyman · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Illustrations from Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales by W. Russell Flint (1913)
1K notes · View notes
lepetitdragonvert · 10 days
Text
Tumblr media
The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer
Black Cat Publishing
2014
Artist : Anna & Elena Balbusso
159 notes · View notes
illustratus · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
The Canterbury Pilgrims by Paul Hardy
400 notes · View notes
lifeofmarvvel · 8 months
Text
if you ever feel bad about having too many wips/not finishing your stories, just remember that Chaucer originally planned to have 120 stories as part of the Canterbury Tales, only wrote 22 (and the beginnings of 2 others) and is considered one of the best English authors of his time
270 notes · View notes
thebeautifulbook · 17 days
Text
Tumblr media
THE CANTERBURY TALES OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER, A Modern Rendering into Prose of the Prologue and Ten Tales by Percy MacKaye, 1875-1956. (New York: Duffield, 1914) Illustrated by Walter Appleton Clark.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
source
65 notes · View notes
gwydpolls · 6 months
Text
Lucian's Library
Feel free to suggest never written books you wish you could read.
205 notes · View notes
queer-ragnelle · 4 months
Text
♡ Loathly Lady Master Post ♡
A collection of medieval literature, modern retellings, illustrations, films, music, audiobooks, & podcasts all about the Loathly Lady.
Tumblr media
Medieval Literature:
The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Prologue by Geoffrey Chaucer
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Tale by Geoffrey Chaucer
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle
Tumblr media
The Marriage of Sir Gawain
Tumblr media
Modern Retellings:
Hero-Myths & Legends of The British Race: The Marriage of Sir Gawayne by M. I. Ebbutt
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Story of King Arthur and His Knights by Howard Pyle
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Arthur Rex by Thomas Berger
Tumblr media
Sir Gawain and The Loathly Lady by Selina Hastings & Juan Wijngaard
Tumblr media
Queen of The Summer Stars by Persia Woolley
Tumblr media
Guinevere: The Legend in Autumn by Persia Woolley
Tumblr media
In Camelot’s Shadow by Sarah Zettel
Tumblr media
For Camelot’s Honor by Sarah Zettel
Tumblr media
Under Camelot’s Banner by Sarah Zettel
Tumblr media
Camelot’s Blood by Sarah Zettel
Tumblr media
Gawain by Gwen Rowley
Tumblr media
Gawain by Paul McLerran
Tumblr media
The Moonlit Knight by @lrtourmaline (that's me ;^))
Tumblr media
Movies:
Merlin and The Sword (1985)
Shrek (2001)
youtube
Music
The Marriage of Sir Gawaine: An Opera by John Seally
Gawain and the Loathly Lady by Llywellyn
The Wife of Bath's Prologue: The Hart Round by Lisa Theriot
The Wife of Bath's Tale: The Marriage of Sir Gawain by Lisa Theriot
The Wife of Bathe by The Soil Bleeds Black
The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle Opera composed by Martin Hennessey
youtube
Audiobooks & Podcasts
The Loathly Lady retold by Donna Washington
Sir Gawaine and the Loathly Lady retold by Alan Irvine
The Wife of Bath's Tale narrated by Kristin Le Moine
The Wife of Bath's Prologue & Tale narrated by Peggy Ashcroft
The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle narrated by The Tolkien Professor
Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnell podcasted by The Stories of King Arthur and His Knights
139 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
63 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Anna and Elena Balbusso’s illustrations for Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales.
112 notes · View notes
a-kind-of-merry-war · 5 months
Text
in answer to @elgooso - #so. prev tags #what. what do you mean#home of rimming?
on this post about Canterbury and my tag: #HOME OF RIMMING
SO.
Calling Canterbury the home of rimming (or "the home of the chocolate smooch") is an in-joke from when we went to visit Canterbury during first year of uni.
BUT WHY, YOU ASK?
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (which, admittedly, happen on the road between London and Canterbury, not in the city itself, but whatever) features The Miller's Tale.
There's a bunch of different things that happen in The Miller's Tale, but for our purposes the key bit is this. Warning - this does, I guess, count as SA, but this is a story told for gross-out reasons by drunken idiot. The point is that its crass and terrible.
Anyway!
Alisoun, who has a husband but is being wooed by two other dudes anyway, is sick of Absolon (guy #2) hanging out under her window, singing to him, and begging her for a kiss. At the climax of the poem, he's outside asking for a kiss, so she sticks her arse out of the window and he kisses her right on the bumhole. With relish.
Here's the key bit of the poem, and a Harvard translation:
Original: And at the wyndow out she putte hir hole and Absolon, hym fil no bet ne wers but with his mouth he kiste hir naked ers ful savourly, er he were war of this. Abak he stirte, and thoughte it was amys, For wel he wiste a womman hath no berd.
Translation into modern English: And at the window out she put her hole, and Absolon, to him it happened no better nor worse, but with his mouth he kissed her naked ass with great relish, before he was aware of this. Back he jumped, and thought it was amiss, for well he knew a woman has no beard.
What really got me was the ful savourly part. And the part where Chaucer specifies that it's her hole, not just her bum or her bumcheek. Because of this delightful tale, we started to call Canterbury the home of rimming. Look, we were young and very, very silly.
Anyway! There we go. Go forth with this knowledge, and kiss people's buttholes ful savourly 🍑
29 notes · View notes
medievalistsnet · 3 months
Text
15 notes · View notes
the-evil-clergyman · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Illustration from Franklin’s Tale for Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales by W. Russell Flint (1913)
1K notes · View notes
maniculum · 5 months
Text
Google Docs vs. Geoffrey Chaucer
A while back, just for fun, I pitted Google Docs's fancy new (read: hilariously inept) machine-learning spellchecker against a chapter of my dissertation that contained a lot of quotations from Le Morte Darthur:
At the time I suggested I might go back and do the same with the chapters that included substantial quotation from the Canterbury Tales and (shudder) Piers Plowman... and today I find myself with little better to do, so let's give it a go. Below the cut.
Tumblr media
Extremely helpful there, thanks. For the curious, gilofre is a plant; in Modern English it's gillyflower. Clowe is just "clove". "Clowe-galofre" is nowhere on Google or in the OED, but it seems "Galofre" is an attested surname, so Google thinks maybe that's what I meant.
Tumblr media
Fascinating choices here. That is of course meant to be nutmeg, and Google Docs has seemingly decided that putting in a space to turn one misspelled word into two words, one of which is spelled correctly, is a positive development. That or this is a continuation of the previously-observed trend that Google turns things into brands and corporation as much as possible -- apparently there is a company called "Emuge-Franken", which is the only result for "emuge" on Google Search.
It hasn't gotten anything right so far, by the way -- all those red underlines I haven't screenshotted anything for, it either suggests a word that is wrong but unremarkably so, or fails to suggest anything.
Tumblr media
(Never mind, it got a couple right in between the last one and this one.)
This is interesting in that it shows Google Docs interprets things differently based on capitalization. This instance of bityde is capitalized because it's at the beginning of the line; the other one in the phrase bityde what bityde, which isn't capitalized, Google is able to correctly interpret as "betide". However, it seems to think the first is a proper noun and makes different suggestions. (Blyde is the Afrikaans name of the Motlatse River in South Africa, it would seem.)
Tumblr media
I am reluctantly forced to hand it to Google Docs with this one. Like, no, that's not what Chaucer meant of course, but I can respect the shot being taken. Also interesting that it gets the blue underline because you can't really spell a transliteration wrong, but that's not how the system we normally use renders it. Not sure why spere "spear" (Google suggests "sphere") and vestiments "vestments" (Google gets this one right) are also marked as blue (style/grammar) rather than red (spelling), though.
Tumblr media
... and now I'm taking what I just handed to Google Docs back away. WTF is this? Why...? you know what, we're moving on.
Tumblr media
Bafflingly, Google thinks there is nothing at all unusual about that first line. Yep, that's normal Modern English there.
Tumblr media
And here's our first example in this post of Google Docs trying to suggest a spelling that is also in Middle English, because I very much suspect the data it uses has been contaminated. Actually, come to think, if their machine learning system bases its judgments on what other users write rather than the old system with a set dictionary, I bet all the people writing papers about pre-standardized-spelling English literature are really screwing up the data. Which is hilarious -- if true, that would mean that I'm actually part of the problem for writing this whole dissertation full of Middle English quotes in Google Docs.
Tumblr media
You might think this is another example of the same, but in fact the change from -ioun to -ion makes that suspect, and the Middle English Dictionary doesn't recognize it without the <u>. And if you Google Refleccion, all the results are in Spanish. However, I can't seem to find it in a Spanish-English dictionary, and those same dictionaries tell me the Spanish for reflection is reflexion -- maybe this is a variant spelling? I only have basic high-school Spanish to draw on here, so if any of my followers are fluent and can explain refleccion to me, I would be interested to learn.
Tumblr media
Hm... no, that's not right either. Although a quick Google search tells me that there is a YA book called Physik, so that's probably what's screwing up this one. Probably not ideal for that sort of thing to happen.
Tumblr media
And this one, it seems, is French. (Again, according to the Middle English Dictionary, all the attested Middle English spellings have the <u> -- but the French cognate is in fact spelled just like Google suggests, as far as I can tell. I don't speak French at all, though, so grain of salt.) I wonder how that happened -- do non-English words just kind of drift into the machine-learning system's vocabulary? Possibly through the same mechanism I speculated about with the Middle English above -- i.e., people write documents that are mostly in English, but contain some quotations or something in other languages, and if that happens enough, Google starts to think it's an English word?
Wait, is that maybe what's screwing a lot of this up? Either Google's system is going "This document is in English, so all the words in it are English words" and thus stuff just keeps bleeding between languages and screwing up the dictionary, OR Google's system is just kind of language-agnostic and sees no issue with suggesting French words in a document that's mostly in English? Is this why there are so many words that aren't correct Modern English spelling, but which Google Docs doesn't mark wrong? Like, they happen to line up with words in other languages, so Google just thinks you're borrowing really haphazardly throughout?
Also, side note, it tried to correct "hir" to "hirt", which is not an English word, but apparently stands for High Impact Resistance Training. Moving on.
Tumblr media
Shenden is a Middle English verb that basically means "to damage or destroy". You don't really see it much in Modern English, though the OED has a couple examples of 20th-century usage. Anyway, I thought this was another case of Google bringing in different Middle English words, but a quick search tells me "Sente" is a skincare brand. That's probably more relevant.
Tumblr media
Google Docs again just ignoring whole lines.
Tumblr media
Odd choice there, sight being closer than site in terms of spelling. Maybe the algorithm assumes that if you end with an <e> you probably mean the second one.
Tumblr media
Interesting, Google Docs. Why do you think that should be "night"? (Oddly, it actually gets all the red-underlined words in this line correct, meaning it pretty much has the context of the word.) Somewhat weird suggestion there.
I'm about a quarter of the way through the document and I think this is long enough for now; I'll probably come back and reblog with additions later. Before I go, however, here are my lists of "things spellcheck should be able to fix but can't" from what I've gone through so far.
First, spellings that differ from Modern English by only one letter, but which completely stump Google Docs (i.e., it marks them wrong but only gives the "why am I not seeing a suggestion?" message):
Goute ("gout")
Herbes ("herbs")
Melodye ("melody")
Smale ("small")
Swete ("sweet")
Syde ("side")
Ther ("there")
Wel ("well")
And second, words that are not correct in Modern English but that Google Docs does not mark wrong:
Anoon ("anon")
Attempree ("a temperate")
Beautee ("beauty")
Bowle ("bowl")
Dar nat ("dare not")
Daunce ("dance")
Dede ("dead")
Doon ("do")
Dronke ("drank")
Dronken ("drunken")
Fyr ("fire")
Gyse ("guise")
Hadde ("had")
Hir ("her")
Hir ("their")
Hond ("hand")
Lak ("lack")
Lakked ("lacked")
Lordes ("lords")
Maad ("made")
Pyne ("pain")
Rasour ("razor")
Sayde ("said")
Shere ("shear")
Som ("some)
Sondry ("sundry")
Spyces ("spices")
Styward ("steward")
Syk ("sick")
Thencens ("the incense")
Usshers ("ushers")
Wente ("went")
Wyf ("wife")
Y-goon ("gone")
21 notes · View notes
Text
You can find part 1 here and the poll(s) that will follow in my 'narrative poems' tag.
I have other poetry polls in my 'poetry' tag.
Christabel
The Ballad of Reading Gaol
The Hunting of the Snark
Æneid
Poetic Edda
The Canterbury Tales
The Ramayana
The Lady of Shalott
The Odyssey
For my next poll, I need to know : would you call Anne Carson's Autobiography of Red a narrative poem ? I've seen it in a list but I haven't read it and I'm not so sure about it.
113 notes · View notes
capt-loverboy · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
First 18 lines of the Canterbury Tales, illustrated
12 notes · View notes
t4llhum4n · 8 months
Text
I don't talk about what I'm reading for school much on here, but like the Wife of Bath's Prologue from the Canterbury Tales?? Pop off queen lmao.
21 notes · View notes