Byhold the myrie talkynge of the Hoost to Chaucer
Here the hoost stynteth Chaucer of his tale of Thopas , and biddeth hym , telle another tale Namoore of this , for goddes dignytee Quod oure hoost for thow makest me
Hoost to Chaucer Whan seyd was al this miracle , euery man As sobre was , that wonder was to se Til that oure hoost Iapen to bigan And thanne at erst he looked vp on me .s. Chaucer And
hoost. to Chaucer WHan seyd was al this myracle , euery man As sobre was , that wonder was to se Til that oure hoost iapen to bigan And thanne at erst he looked vp on me .i. Chaucer And
de Chaucer Grisilde is deed , and eek hir pacience And bothe atones , buryed in Ytaille For which I crie , in open audience No wedded man , so hardy be tassaille His wyues pacience , in hope to
Miniature of Chaucer, wearing an inkhorn around his neck, clutching a rosary, and pointing at the text. The lines of verse at which Chaucer points refer to his portrait: 'I have heere his liknesse / Do make, to this ende,
a miniature of Chaucer, wearing an inkhorn around his neck, clutching a rosary, and pointing at the text. Horizontal catchwords.f. 1* is a parchment flyleaf.f. 1: Added text in a later hand, with the rubric: 'Here begynnth the Book how
to the nation for £10,000 (a fraction of their contemporary value) under the Act of Parliament that also established the British Museum; the Harley manuscripts form one of the foundation collections of the British Library. Puzzle initial Geoffrey Chaucer England
to the nation for £10,000 (a fraction of their contemporary value) under the Act of Parliament that also established the British Museum; the Harley manuscripts form one of the foundation collections of the British Library. Decorated initial Geoffrey Chaucer England
was written in 1411 or 1412 for the instruction of Henry V, then Prince of Wales. Miniature in colours of Chaucer clutching a rosary and pointing at the text (f. 88). Miniature in colours of a man, reclining on the
London 95 images. Date(s) Author(s) [Geoffroy Chaucer] Collection(s) Part One: Medieval Manuscripts from the Sloane and Additional Manuscripts, Section A Manuscript Number 25,718 Source Library British Library, London Description THE Canterbury Tales of Geoffroy Chaucer. Imperfect; containing portions only of
two leaves (153 lines) at the beginning, and two more (Il. 234-396) after f. 1: see Skeate's Complets Works of Chaucer, Oxford, 1894, vol. iv. pp. 5, 8, 12; (2) (2)"the knightes tale." f. 7 b. Wanting eight leaves after
Date(s) XV, XVI, and XVII Centuries Author(s) [W. B., Gedeon Bonnivert, P. Matthieu, Geoffrey Chaucer, Cicero, Ben Jonson, Mondeville, Petronius Arbiter, M. Recourbière] Collection(s) Sloane Manuscript Number 1009 Source Library British Library, London Description 1 1. Excerpta ex vitruvio aliisque