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    geoffrey chaucer

    Explore " geoffrey chaucer" with insightful episodes like "The Canterbury Tales: Episode 7", "The Canterbury Tales: Episode 6", "The Canterbury Tales: Episode 5", "The Canterbury Tales: Episode 4" and "The Canterbury Tales: Episode 2" from podcasts like ""BiblioTakes", "BiblioTakes", "BiblioTakes", "BiblioTakes" and "BiblioTakes"" and more!

    Episodes (9)

    Why you should read Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (and meet his feistiest character)

    Why you should read Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (and meet his feistiest character)

    Boastful, funny, clever, skilled and much maligned: meet Geoffrey Chaucer's Wife of Bath, both his fourteenth-century invention and a fresh remaking of her in Karen Brooks' The Good Wife of Bath. Also, the feelgood book of the year, with Sarah Winman's Still Life. Mediaeval literature specialist Louise D'Arcens and novelist Robert Gott join Kate for a lively discussion.

    S2.36 - Master of Love

    S2.36 - Master of Love

    “Love will not be constrain'd by mastery...Love is a thing as any spirit free.”
    Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales


    It's been a long while since we did a god mill, so this week we decided to roll one up, with a caveat: what would this god be like in Oruhne? And what if they were exclusive to that continent alone?

    Curious about something you heard in this episode? Chances are you can find out more about it in the Record of the Lorekeeper!

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    Want to learn more about Halûme? Got some ideas of your own? Join the conversation at www.reddit.com/r/thelorekeepers or by visiting our homepage at thelorekeepers.com and clicking on "Canon". Note that it may not render properly on your browser. If so, try using Chrome.

    Questions or ideas? Visit r/thelorekeepers!
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