
audiobook
| Transcriber's note: | In this edition the two versions of the Prologue to the Legend are each assembled for continuous reading. Page numbers {66a} etc. refer to the upper parts of the printed pages, {66b} etc. refer to the lower parts. Skeat's commentary on the Astrolabe (mentioned in the text as "Footnotes") has been similarly separated from Chaucer's text. A Glossary including words from the texts in this volume is included in Skeat's Volume VI, available from Project Gutenberg at http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43097/43097-h/43097-h.htm. |
INTRODUCTION TO THE HOUSE OF FAME
INTRODUCTION TO THE LEGEND OF GOOD WOMEN.
INTRODUCTION TO A TREATISE ON THE ASTROLABE.
THE HOUS OF FAME. - BOOK I.
BOOK II.
BOOK III.
THE LEGEND OF GOOD WOMEN.
I. THE LEGEND OF CLEOPATRA.
II. THE LEGEND OF THISBE OF BABYLON.
Step inside a world where poetry, myth, and early science intertwine. This collection brings together a visionary quest for fame, a heartfelt tribute to celebrated women, and a medieval guide to the stars—all voiced by the same masterful storyteller. Listeners will hear the rhythm of a 14th‑century mind as it navigates both lofty imagination and practical curiosity.
In the opening vision, an eagle lifts the poet into a soaring dream of the House of Fame, a glittering palace where whispers of legend and rumor swirl like clouds. The journey blends classical allusion with vivid medieval landscape, offering a glimpse of how fame was imagined and measured in an age before print.
The volume then turns to a tender celebration of virtuous women, followed by a surprisingly precise treatise on the astrolabe, revealing Chaucer’s fascination with astronomy. Interspersed notes trace the sources that later shaped his famous pilgrimage tales, giving listeners a richer sense of the literary tapestry behind the stories they love.
Language
en
Duration
~21 hours (1260K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2014-02-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1342–1400
Best known for The Canterbury Tales, this fourteenth-century writer helped shape English literature by bringing lively voices, humor, and sharp observation into poetry. His work still feels vivid because it pays such close attention to how ordinary people speak, travel, argue, and dream.
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