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Father of the English Language
Contributed by
Elizabeth_Dandy
on
Wednesday, 19th January 2005 @ 08:45:04 PM in AEST
Topic:
dedicatedpoems
|
Geoffrey Chaucer
He is called Language Daddy, for he is, The undisputed father of our tongue,, But he is more, oh so much more than this, He is the Maker of the English song,
Lo! Maker is the medieval word, For Poet, - Greeks and dark-age men agree, A Maker"-Poet that can bridge the fjord, The hodgepodge mishmash tongue diversity.
A nascent nation needs an idiom. So divers ethnic groups may share in it, Geoffs tongue did bear the mark of Christendom. And prove for it most eminently fit.
Geoff gave the language to the populace. Formed from so many a medley element, A language of distinction, strength and class, And made French-Anglo-Saxon fuse and blend,
It is the poets task to teach the small And piddling man how truly great he is, And to discount his weakness and recall With awe his souls essential mysteries.
To never grow accustomed to the stars- It is the poets business to prevent Mans getting used to stars and nenuphars, But to foment and spur "ASTONISHMENT".
Hypothesis and theories grow stale, But things continue always to be fresh, The lisping brook, the trees, the nightingale. The rainbow, forest, lakes and mountain ash.
Geoffs characters, alive and up-to-date, As issued from this Maker-Poets quill, Contemporaries of us, they parade Before our eyes, vivaciously and thrill!
Small farm yard life turned into cosmic play, With cock and hen and jealous cterie, That kept with awe the wily fox at bay Before so great a cosmic tragedy.
Geoffs farmyard chicks cluck intellectually, discussing Dante, Virgil and Homer, Cluck gravely about fate and destiny, Of Deity and angels bright and fair
Oh Maker poet, Geoffrey Chaucer Hail! So great, so great is our debt to thee, Who coined the term Ill fight you tooth and nail And other catchword cues of poetry.
And Geoffrey left as precious legacy, For Marlow, Spencer, Milton and Shakespeare,- A tongue in which to write their poetry, Our English - English pleasing to the ear.
Be blessed Cheoffrey,-, may the seraphs guard Your quotes and sayings,- each and every word, And fill with joys celestial your big heart While singing your sweet tunes before the Lord!,
Elizabeth Dandy
One of Geoffrey Chaucers sayings:
Lyfe is so shorte - the craft so long to learne has been universally acknowledged.
Copyright ©
Elizabeth_Dandy
... [
2005-01-19 20:45:04] (Date/Time posted on
site)
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Re: Father of the English Language
(User Rating: 1 ) by emystar on
Tuesday, 25th January 2005 @ 06:34:04 PM AEST (User
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Very good lesson and u always make it interesting. I'm back after a major crash while, down my son up graded me and I'm upgrading even more real soon.
Keep up the great writing.
luv, huggs, smiles,
emy |
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