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Love Quote by Geoffrey Chaucer

"By nature, men love newfangledness"

About this Quote

Newfangledness sounds cute until you remember Chaucer is saying it with a raised eyebrow. In Middle English, “newefangelnesse” isn’t a TED Talk fetish for innovation; it’s a moral tic, a restlessness that makes people easy to sway, easy to sell to, easy to fool. Chaucer, the great cataloger of human appetites, treats novelty as another craving on the list - right alongside lust, status, and a good story told badly.

The line works because it’s both broad and pointed. “By nature” pretends to be scientific, almost clinical, as if Chaucer is offering a neutral observation about the species. But that phrasing is a smirk: if the impulse is natural, then our lofty claims to constancy and principle start looking like self-flattering fiction. “Men” here isn’t only male; it’s mankind, the social world that prides itself on tradition while stampeding toward whatever glitters.

Context matters: Chaucer wrote in an England jittery with change - rising urban commerce, shifting class boundaries, church authority under pressure, fashions and tastes circulating faster than old hierarchies could metabolize. His poems are crowded with pilgrims, clerks, wives, and hustlers trying on identities the way they try on clothes. “Newfangledness” becomes the engine of manipulation: preachers with fresh doctrines, lovers with fresh promises, merchants with fresh goods.

The subtext is less “people like new things” than “people can be counted on to betray yesterday’s certainty.” Chaucer’s genius is to make that sound timeless and faintly embarrassing, like a vice we keep repainting as progress.

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TopicWisdom
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By nature, men love newfangledness
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Geoffrey Chaucer (1343 AC - October 25, 1400) was a Poet from England.

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