The Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer
Leído por LibriVox Volunteers





The Canterbury Tales is a collection of stories written in Middle English 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 to visit the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathedral.
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, beast fable, and fabliau. The characters, introduced in the General Prologue of the book, tell tales of great cultural relevance.
The version read here was edited by D. Laing Purves (1838-1873) “for popular perusal” and the language is mostly updated.
(Summary by Wikipedia/Gesine)
(19 hr 23 min)
Capítulos
Preface | 6:21 | Leído por Gesine |
The Life of Geoffrey Chaucer | 58:18 | Leído por Chip |
The General Prologue | 39:00 | Leído por Thomas Hoover |
The Knight’s Tale, Part 1 | 1:06:20 | Leído por Ted Delorme |
The Knight's Tale, Part 2 | 1:19:51 | Leído por Ted Delorme |
The Miller's Tale | 54:42 | Leído por Gord Mackenzie |
The Reeve's Tale | 23:26 | Leído por Alex Foster |
The Cook's Tale | 7:51 | Leído por Chip |
The Men of Law's Tale | 1:19:51 | Leído por Chip |
The Wife of Bath's Tale | 1:03:23 | Leído por Kristin LeMoine |
The Friar's Tale | 22:53 | Leído por Kara Shallenberg (1969-2023) |
The Sompnour's Tale | 43:03 | Leído por Chip |
The Clerk's Tale | 1:20:06 | Leído por Chip |
The Merchant's Tale | 1:21:25 | Leído por Cynthia Lyons (1946-2011) |
The Squire's Tale | 43:41 | Leído por Joshua Young |
The Franklin's Tale | 31:34 | Leído por Alex Foster |
The Doctor's Tale | 17:01 | Leído por Fox in the Stars |
The Pardoner's Tale | 40:02 | Leído por David Barnes |
The Shipman's Tale | 27:36 | Leído por Gwen |
The Prioress's Tale | 15:06 | Leído por Fox in the Stars |
The Tale of Sir Thopas | 10:12 | Leído por Jim Mowatt |
Chaucer’s Tale of Meliboeus | 36:01 | Leído por Kirsten Ferreri |
The Monk's Tale | 47:29 | Leído por Andy Minter (1934-2017) |
The Nun’s Priest’s Tale | 47:07 | Leído por Graham Williams |
The Second Nun’s Tale | 27:43 | Leído por Alys AtteWater |
The Canons Yeoman’s Tale | 37:28 | Leído por Joshua Young |
The Manciple’s Tale | 17:04 | Leído por Thomas Hoover |
The Parson’s Tale | 54:57 | Leído por Robert Foster |
Preces de Chauceres | 3:48 | Leído por Gesine |
Reseñas
Wife of Bath's Tale Review





emelye
Excellent reading of the middle english text (untranslated, thanks!) with modern vowels. Very listenable and clear.
Poetry





Graham Widmer
None of these readers were bad, and some of them were quite good! As for the story, I found some of it hard to follow on audiobook, but I found that when I picked up the physical copy of the book, I had a much richer experience. The Miller's Tale made me laugh aloud. Quite good, but understand that most of it is poetry, not prose.
Genius





Jon Mark Wilson
Chaucer captures the social and intellectual culture of England in c. 1400 with it's many nuances, by writing idiomatically and in character. The satire is rich, the social commentary is prophetic. maybe this is too random a comparison but he stands to his culture something like Mark Twain in the America of the Gilded Age.
Very Poor Middle English





ApolloReed
It is obvious that this reader has studied little or no Middle English pronunciation. If it is your intent to listen to this recording to improve your Middle English, search for Jess B Bessinger Jr.'s reading of the General Prologue.
More than one rotten apples...





A LibriVox Listener
This set of recordings suffers as do many others published with multiple collaborators as opposed to a single reader.
The Canterbury Tales





William K.
The narrator for The Knight's Tale cannot be understood and his style/lisp ruin my favorite story.
Couldn't make it past the prologue





CrisPellie
Chaucer is not this reader's forte. No poetry in his annoying voice.





A LibriVox Listener
Some readers are better than others, but everything was clear.