
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 lively, sharp-eyed medieval poet helped shape English literature while also spending much of his life in royal service. His writing can feel surprisingly modern: witty, humane, and deeply interested in how ordinary people speak, dream, and deceive.
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by Geoffrey Chaucer

by Geoffrey Chaucer

by Geoffrey Chaucer