Geoffrey Chaucer Best Quotes
Collection of top 30 famous quotes about Geoffrey Chaucer Best
Geoffrey Chaucer Best Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Geoffrey Chaucer Best quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Felds hath eyen, and wode have eres.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
And when a beest is deed, he hath no peyne; But man after his deeth moot wepe and pleyne.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
If gold ruste, what shall iren do?
— Geoffrey Chaucer
The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
Everybody wants to go to the Super Bowl. Nobody wants to run laps.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
For of fortunes sharp adversitee The worst kynde of infortune is this, A man to han ben in prosperitee, And it remembren, whan it passed is.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
Right as an aspen lefe she gan to quake.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
Then the Miller fell off his horse.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
Death is the end of every worldly pain.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
Abstinence is approved of God.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
No empty handed man can lure a bird
— Geoffrey Chaucer
That of all the floures in the mede, Thanne love I most these floures white and rede, Suche as men callen daysyes in her toune.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
Be nat wrooth, my lord, though that I pleye. Ful ofte in game a sooth I have herd seye!
— Geoffrey Chaucer
How potent is the fancy! People are so impressionable, they can die of imagination.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
And then the wren gan scippen and to daunce.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
And after winter folweth grene May.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
By nature, men love newfangledness.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
He that loveth God will do diligence to please God by his works, and abandon himself, with all his might, well for to do.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
And brought of mighty ale a large quart.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
The smylere with the knyf under the cloke.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
What makes Geoffrey Chaucer such compelling reading is his creation of a riveting conversation between the ideal and the everyday.
— John Mark Reynolds
And shame it is, if that a priest take keep, To see a shitten shepherd and clean sheep:
— Geoffrey Chaucer
The latter end of joy is woe.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
Make a virtue of necessity.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
One flesh they are; and one flesh, so I'd guess,
Has but one heart, come grief or happiness. — Geoffrey Chaucer
Has but one heart, come grief or happiness. — Geoffrey Chaucer
The cat would eat fish but would not get her feet wet.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
Or as an ook comth of a litel spir, So thorugh this lettre, which that she hym sente, Encressen gan desir, of which he brente.
— Geoffrey Chaucer
I am not the rose, but I have lived near the rose.
— Geoffrey Chaucer