Main YMMV main index Narrative
|
![]() Are we there yet? I know a shortcut! My saddle chafes. If I tell you a story, will you all shut up? That hem hath holpen, whan that they were seke." The Canterbury Tales is a collection of short stories written in Late Middle English by Geoffrey Chaucer in the late 14th century about a group of travellers on a pilgrimage to the tomb of St. Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral*. To pass the time on what was then a journey of several days, they decide to hold a storytelling contest where each pilgrim will tell two tales on the journey to Canterbury and two tales on the return trip. Originally, Chaucer was going to write all 124 tales, but was unable to finish them before his death in 1400.The pilgrims' tales cover a wide variety of genres, from morality plays to romances to bawdy tales with lots of sex and fart jokes.The tales are often published these days in verse "translations" (or even in prose), but as the excerpt of the opening lines above shows, they are perfectly comprehensible in the original in a good edition with footnotes.—Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales - Prologue in Contains examples of:
And then they all ate the Nun's Priest. And there was much rejoicing. (Yaaaay)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||