Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Activity category:
Nowhere so busy a man as he than he, and yet he seemed busier than he was. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Books category:
-paraphrased... Go, little book, go, little mine tragedy. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Complaining category:
-from The Franklin's Tale... One cannot scold or complain at every word. Learn to endure patiently, or else, as I live and breathe, you shall learn it whether you want or not. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Criticism category:
The guilty think all talk is of themselves. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Desire category:
Forbid us something, and that thing we desire. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Fashion category:
There's never a new fashion but it's old. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Guilt category:
The guilty think all talk is of themselves. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Imagination category:
People can die of mere imagination. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Invention category:
By nature, men love newfangledness. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Knowledge category:
Very wise is he that can know himself. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Life category:
The life so short, the craft so long to learn. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Listening category:
-in ca.1385... Oon ere it herde, at tother out it wente. [trans. in one ear and out the other] (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Love category:
Love is blind. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Prayer category:
We know little of the things for which we pray. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Teaching category:
First he wrought, and afterward he taught. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Temperament category:
-from The Franklin's Tale... One cannot be avenged for every wrong; according to the occasion, everyone who knows how, must use temperance. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Time category:
Time and tide wait for no man. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Wisdom category:
The greatest scholars are not usually the wisest people. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
Geoffrey Chaucer - From the Work category:
There's no workman, whatsoever he be, / That may both work well and hastily. (Geoffrey Chaucer)
|