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  2. The Wife of Bath's Tale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wife_of_Bath's_Tale

    The Wife of Bath's Prologue is, by far, the longest in The Canterbury Tales and is twice as long as the actual story, showing the importance of the prologue to the significance of the overall tale. In the beginning, the wife expresses her views in which she believes the morals of women are not merely that they all solely desire "sovereignty ...

  3. The Wife of Bath (play) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wife_of_Bath_(play)

    The Wife of Bath is a 1713 comedy play by the British writer John Gay. It was inspired by The Wife of Bath's Tale by Geoffrey Chaucer. The play marked a conscious switch by Gay towards an apolitical and distant past, after his contemporary work The Mohocks had faced controversy and censorship the previous year. [2]

  4. Loathly lady - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loathly_lady

    The loathly lady (Welsh: dynes gas, Motif D732 in Stith Thompson's motif index), is a tale type commonly used in medieval literature, most famously in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Wife of Bath's Tale. [1] The motif is that of a woman who appears unattractive (ugly, loathly ) but undergoes a transformation upon being approached by a man in spite of ...

  5. Ellesmere Chaucer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellesmere_Chaucer

    It is seen as an important source for efforts to reconstruct Chaucer's original text and intentions, though John M. Manly and Edith Rickert in their Text of the Canterbury Tales (1940) noted that whoever edited the manuscript probably made substantial revisions, tried to regularise spelling, and put the individual Tales into a smoothly running ...

  6. Story generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Story_generator

    A story generator or plot generator is a tool that generates basic narratives or plot ideas. The generator could be in the form of a computer program, a chart with multiple columns, a book composed of panels that flip independently of one another, or a set of several adjacent reels that spin independently of one another, allowing a user to select elements of a narrative plot.

  7. Canterbury Tales (TV series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canterbury_Tales_(TV_series)

    Each story is an adaptation of one of Geoffrey Chaucer's 14th-century Canterbury Tales. While the stories have been transferred to a modern 21st-century setting, they are still set along the traditional Pilgrims' route to Canterbury.

  8. The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wedding_of_Sir_Gawain...

    An earlier version of the story appears as "The Wyfe of Bayths Tale" ("The Wife of Bath's Tale") in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, [1] and the later ballad "The Marriage of Sir Gawain" is essentially a retelling, though its relationship to the medieval poem is uncertain. [2]

  9. The Canterbury Tales (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Canterbury_Tales_(film)

    This story depicts a miller as a cuckold to get back at the depiction of the carpenter in the previous tale. The drunken cook (played by eccentric South African tattoo artist J. P. van Dyne) sets up his story about Perkin the Reveler. The Wife of Bath delivers a monologue about her "instrument" that arouses the Pardoner.