There are about 30 pilgrims in Chaucer's 'The Canterbury Tales'.
One of the following may match your letter count and existing letters:
The Host, Harry Baily
The Knight
The Miller
The Reeve (Reeves)
The Man of Law or Sergeant of Law
Roger the Cook
The wife of Bath, Alisoun
Hubert the Friar
The summoner
The Clerk
The Merchant
The Squire
The Franklin
The Shipman
The Prioress, Madame Eglantine
The Physician
The Pardoner
The Monk
The Priest
The Nun
The Canon
The Yeoman
The Manciple
The Parson
Jimmy
England
john gower & William langland
His Dignity
no she was a pilgrim
The possessive form of "Pilgrim" is "Pilgrim's."
it is pilgrim
el pilgrim
Pilgrim is a noun.
It could be Chaucers or Chaucer's, the plural or the possessive form of the name Chaucer.
Ingeborg Besser has written: 'Chaucers 'Hous of fame''
The correct spelling is "pilgrim."