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The son of a London wine merchant, Geoffrey Chaucer
was the first great poet in the language. Dryden called him, 'the
father of English poetry.' He was buried in Westminster Abbey in
what became known in his wake as Poet's Corner. A customs officer,
courtier and diplomat, Chaucer enjoyed the patronage of John of
Gaunt, the Duke of Lancaster (a major character in Shakespeare's
Richard II) and he prospered under the reigns of Edward III,
Richard II and Henry IV. In royal service he travelled widely through
France and Italy and his verse shows the tremendous influence of
continental poetry, especially the work of Boccaccio, whose Il
Filostrato he freely adapted to create his own love poem, Troilus
and Crisedye. Arguably, part of Chaucer's genius was his ability
take European models and rework them in English. The language was
then in a state of flux and he did much to establish it as a literary
medium.
The Canterbury Tales, in which a group of
pilgrims recite stories to one another en route to the martyred
Thomas a Becket's shrine, is his most celebrated work. Although
unfinished, it provides captivating, and very funny, snapshots of
every level of medieval society - from the grasping Pardoner and
the bawdy Miller to the wanton Wife of Bath and the 'verray, parfit,
gentil knight'.
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