The Life of Poetry -- Chaucer!
Thursday October 25, 2007
Geoffrey Chaucer wanders through literature, with his The Canterbury Tales, but where did he come from, and why is he such an important figure in literary history?Geoffrey Chaucer was born in the early 1340s (ca. 1343) to John Chaucer, a vintner and deputy to the king's butler. As a boy, he was a page to the Countess of Ulster. With Chaucer's connections, he traveled around the world. And, with his experiences in court and in the army, he had plenty of material for some of his most well-known works.
Adolphus William Ward writes of Chaucer: "To meet this demand upon his genius, Chaucer was born with many gifts which he carefully and assiduously exercised in a long series of poetical experiments, and which he was able felicitously to combine for the achievement of results unprecedented in our literature. In readiness of descriptive power, in brightness and variety of imagery, and in flow of diction, Chaucer remained unequalled by any English poet, till he was surpassed..." He later sums up his discussion of Chaucer by saying "in his poetry there is LIFE."
Take the The Canterbury Tales Quiz. Test your knowledge of this literary great!

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