The Burlingame Main Library and Easton Branch are closed until further notice. We do offer Curbside Pickup at the Main Library. You can use this catalog to request items and, when an item is ready, we will notify you to arrange a pickup time. The book returns are open at the Main Library. The Easton Library book return is closed at this time, so please return items to the Main Library.
Chaucer's finest work begins at the Tabard Inn, where thirty travelers of widely varying classes and occupations are gathering to make the annual pilgrimage to Becket's shrine at Canterbury. It is agreed that each traveler will tell four tales to help pass the time during their long journey, and that the host of the inn will reward the best storyteller with a free supper upon their return. Thus we hear, translated into modern English, the knight's tale, the merchant's tale, the miller's tale, the wife of Bath's tale, twenty-some tales in all. Some are bawdy, some spiritual, some romantic, some mysterious, some chivalrous. Between the stories, the travelers converse, joke, and argue, revealing much of their individual outlooks upon life as well as what life was like in late-fourteenth-century England.
Comment
Add a CommentThere are no comments for this title yet.