Transcription of Geoffrey Chaucer - The Canterbury Tales: Knight’s Tale
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Geoffrey Chaucer - The Canterbury Tales: knight s tale 1 The knight s tale Geoffrey Chaucer Here begins the knight s tale . And now Theseus, drawing close to his native land in a laurelled chariot after fierce battle with the people, is heralded by glad applause and the shouts of the people flung to the heavens and the merry trump of warfare that has reached its Long ago, as old histories tell us, there was a duke called Theseus, lord and ruler of Athens, and in his time such a conqueror that there was none greater under the sun. He had subdued many rich countries, and with his wisdom and his knighthood had conquered all the realm of the Amazons, the land of women, which formerly was called Scythia.
Geoffrey Chaucer - The Canterbury Tales: Knight’s Tale 1 The Knight’s Tale Geoffrey Chaucer Here begins the Knight’s Tale. “And now Theseus, drawing close to his native land in a laurelled chariot after fierce battle with the people, is heralded by glad applause and the shouts of the people flung to the heavens and the merry
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