The Canterbury Tales

The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer


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The Canterbury Tales





Chaucer's tale of his motley band of travellers on their pilgrimage to the shrine of Thomas a Becket have become legendary and still represent, in John Dryden's words, "God's plenty." The Canterbury Tales, compiled in the late fourteenth century, is an incisive portrait, infused with Chaucer's wry wit and vibrant, poetical languauge. He evokes a spectrum of colourful characters, from the bawdy Wife of Bath to the gallant Knight, the fastidious Prioress and the burly, drunken Miller. As they wend their way from Southwark to Canterbury, tales are told to pass the time, and the stories are as diverse as the narrators, encompassing themes such as adultery, revenge, courtly love, lechery, avarice and penitence. As humorous today as when it was written over six centuries ago, The Canterbury Tales remains one of the most popular and enjoyable of the classic works of literature.

Ficção / Literatura Estrangeira / Poemas, poesias

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The Canterbury Tales
on 5/2/22


It's a storybook and each story has a moral of the story. The book talks about several men who tell each other stories and in the end the best story wins. I read this book because I had it for a long time and I had never read it.... leia mais

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J. Gabriel
cadastrou em:
07/09/2009 23:31:57