The Canterbury Tales.
Canterbury Tales
Chaucer's collection of medieval tales is called "The Canterbury Tales." It consists of a diverse group of stories told by pilgrims on their journey to Canterbury Cathedral, showcasing different aspects of medieval life and society in England. The tales are written in Middle English and provide insight into the social dynamics and values of the time.
His Dignity
The Mabinogion consists of eleven tales, which are a collection of medieval Welsh prose narratives. These tales include stories of mythological events, heroic deeds, and magical beings.
Roald Dahl's collection for adults is called "Adult Stories" or "Tales of the Unexpected."
Geoffrey Chaucer's last work was "The Canterbury Tales," a collection of stories written in Middle English that remains one of his most famous works. The tales are framed as part of a story-telling competition by a group of pilgrims traveling to the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral.
Joel Chandler Harris compiled a collection of African-American folk tales and published them. He called these tales "Uncle Remus".
An inn is called an inn in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. That is the medieval term for an inn. Similar words are tavern or roadhouse.
Chaucer did not write a ballad of gentleness. However, he did write "The Canterbury Tales," a collection of stories in medieval English society.
The Miller's Tale is one of many tales that make up Chaucer's famous work The Canterbury Tales. The Miller's Tale is about a miller who disparages a carpenter and his wife.
Children's and Household Tales, commonly called Grimm's Fairy Tales was a collection of German folk tales published in 1812 and written by brothers Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm.
The cast of Tales from the Vatican Collection - 1982 includes: Vincent Price as Narrator