Canterbury Tales
The Canterbury Tales is a collection of stories written by Geoffrey Chaucer in the 14th century (two of them in prose, the rest in verse). The tales, some of which are originals and others not, are contained inside a frame tale and told by a group of pilgrims on their way from Southwark to Canterbury, England (where a tourist attraction entitled The Canterbury Tales may nowadays be viewed) to visit Saint Thomas à Becket's shrine at the cathedral there (later destroyed by Henry VIII).
|
| Canterbury Tales Woodcut 1484
|
The themes of the tales vary, and include topics such as courtly love, treachery and avarice.The genres also vary, and include romance, Breton lai, sermon, and fabliau. The characters, introduced in the Prologue of the book, tell tales of extreme cultural relevance.
The Tales include:
Some of the tales are serious and others are humorous; however, all are very precise in describing the traits and faults of human nature. Religious malpractice is a major theme. The work is incomplete, as it was originally intended that each character would tell two tales, one on the way to Canterbury and one on the return journey.
Perhaps the greatest contribution that this work has made to English literature is in its use of vulgar (i.e. 'of the people') English, instead of using French or Latin, which were usually used for literary works. The structure of Canterbury Tales is also easy to find in other contemporary works, such as Boccaccio's Decameron, which may have been one of Chaucer's main sources of inspiration.
The title of the work has become an everyday phrase in the language and has been variously adapted and adopted, eg. in the title of the British film, A Canterbury Tale. Recently an animated version of some of the tales has been produced for British television. As well as a version with Modern English dialogue, there were versions in Middle English and Welsh.
The most important element of the tales are its focus on the change of the three estates
External Link
Project Gutenberg archive of the text
Referenced By
1301 in literature | 1302 in literature | 1303 in literature | 1304 in literature | 1305 in literature | 1306 in literature | 1307 in literature | 1308 in literature | 1309 in literature | 1310 in literature | 1311 in literature | 1312 in literature | 1313 in literature | 1314 in literature | 1315 in literature | 1316 in literature | 1317 in literature | 1318 in literature | 1319 in literature | 1320 in literature | 1321 in literature | 1322 in literature | 1323 in literature | 1324 in literature | 1325 in literature | 1326 in literature | 1327 in literature | 1328 in literature | 1329 in literature | 1330 in literature | 1331 in literature | 1332 in literature | 1333 in literature | 1334 in literature | 1335 in literature | 1336 in literature | 1337 in literature | 1338 in literature | 1339 in literature | 1340 in literature | 1341 in literature | 1342 in literature | 1343 in literature | 1344 in literature | 1345 in literature | 1346 in literature | 1347 in literature | 1348 in literature | 1349 in literature | 1350 in literature | 1351 in literature | 1352 in literature | 1353 in literature | 1354 in literature | 1355 in literature | 1356 in literature | 1357 in literature | 1358 in literature | 1359 in literature | 1360 in literature | 1361 in literature | 1362 in literature | 1363 in literature | 1364 in literature | 1365 in literature | 1366 in literature | 1367 in literature | 1368 in literature | 1369 in literature | 1370 in literature | 1371 in literature | 1372 in literature | 1373 in literature | 1374 in literature | 1375 in literature | 1376 in literature | 1377 in literature | 1378 in literature | 1379 in literature | 1380 in literature | 1381 in literature | 1382 in literature | 1383 in literature | 1384 in literature | 1385 in literature | 1386 in literature | 1387 | 1387 in literature | 1388 in literature | 1389 in literature | 1390 in literature | 1391 in literature | 1392 in literature | 1393 in literature | 1394 in literature | 1395 in literature | 1396 in literature | 1397 in literature | 1398 in literature | 1399 in literature ...
|