The Canterbury Tales is Chaucer's most famous poetic work. He did not compose the poem in a short period of time, but seems to have designed it around 1387. Until his death he worked on the tales leaving them in a fragmentary state.
In the General Prologue thirty-two pilgrims meet at Southwark to take up their way to Canterbury. They agree to tell two stories each on their way to and back from Canterbury. Only twenty-three of them, however, tell a tale. Although many tales are linked by verbal exchanges between the pilgrims, the exact order is not very certain. Most modern editions follow the arrangement of the Ellesmere Manuscript which offers twenty-three miniatures of the pilgrims.
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Click here to see who tells which story in The Canterbury Tales.
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