.
No Speller's Tale - no, there could not have been, but that's made me wonder what Dr. Samuel Johnson, the writer who published the first standard English dictionary in 1755, thought of Chaucer!
I suspect great respect, but Johnson aimed to establish some order in an otherwise rather chaotic language, when people generally were becoming more literate and the need for written formal documents increased rapidly along with the growth in literature.
In Chaucer's time few people could read, the English vocabulary was far smaller anyway, most formal Church and legal documents were in Latin, and so rough-and-ready, vaguely-phonetic, perhaps dialectical spellings were acceptable.