Artist(s): Shanks, Rosalind
Label: Naxos AudioBooks
Genre: Great Epics and Tales
Catalogue No: NA330412
Barcode: 9789626343043
Release Date: 01/2004

CHAUCER, G.: Canterbury Tales, Vol. 3 (Modern English Verse Translation) (Unabridged)

Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, a collection of narratives written between 1387 and 1400, tells of a group of thirty people from all layers of society who pass the time along their pilgrimage to Canterbury by telling stories to one another, their interaction mediated (at times) by the affable host—Chaucer himself. Naxos AudioBooks’ third volume presents the tales of six people, here in an unabridged modern verse translation (by Frank Ernest Hill, 1935). This is an ideal way to appreciate the genuinely funny and droll talent of England’s early master storyteller. Seven leading British actors bring the medieval world into the twenty-first century, and at least in terms of character, not much seems to have changed!

Tracklist

Disc 1
Chaucer, Geoffrey - Author
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
1 The Friar's Tale 02:21
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
2 Here begins the Friar's Tale 03:47
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
3 So it befell that on a certain day 02:46
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
4 Now by the truth, my brother dear 03:48
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
5 In various ways and figures we appear 02:47
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
6 So on their way they rode forth speedily 02:36
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
7 The summoner knocketh at the widow's gate 02:34
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
8 And when the fiend heard how she cursed him so 03:10
Pigott-Smith, Tim (Reader)
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
9 The Summoner's Tale 03:15
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
10 Here the Summoner begins his tale 03:12
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
11 Nay cried the friar 03:58
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
12 Dear Sir, with your permission 03:43
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
13 Lo, Moses fasted forty days and nights 02:40
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
14 For they, I think, are like Jovinian 03:42
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
15 And bear this word away now 03:20
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
16 Wrathful Cambyses loved both drink and revel 03:02
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
17 Nay, by St Simon, quickly answered he 03:03
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
18 Ha! Thought the friar 03:19
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
19 The lady of the house sat listening 02:52
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
20 My lord, said Jankin 02:56
Tompkinson, Stephen (Reader)
Disc 2
Kay, Charles (Reader)
1 The Lawyer's Tale 05:36
Kay, Charles (Reader)
2 The Prologue of the Lawyer's Tale 02:06
Kay, Charles (Reader)
3 Here the Lawyer begins his tale 03:44
Kay, Charles (Reader)
4 This sultan for his privy council sent 02:56
Kay, Charles (Reader)
5 The day is come at last for their departing 03:48
Kay, Charles (Reader)
6 The mother of the sultan 03:57
Kay, Charles (Reader)
7 Part 2 03:43
Kay, Charles (Reader)
8 A certain treasure that was with her sent 03:06
Kay, Charles (Reader)
9 Into our English ocean thus she came 04:11
Kay, Charles (Reader)
10 Satan, our ever-waiting arch-betrayer 03:19
Kay, Charles (Reader)
11 Down on her knees she dropped 03:08
Kay, Charles (Reader)
12 But who was wroth this wedding rite to see 03:33
Kay, Charles (Reader)
13 Sad was the king, having this letter read 03:45
Kay, Charles (Reader)
14 Now wept the young and old in all that place 03:29
Kay, Charles (Reader)
15 Part 3 03:30
Kay, Charles (Reader)
16 How could this feeble woman find the might 02:55
Kay, Charles (Reader)
17 Aella, who caused his mother to be slain 03:15
Kay, Charles (Reader)
18 Fair when they met did Aella give her greeting 03:23
Kay, Charles (Reader)
19 Who can describe the piteous joy they know 03:25
Kay, Charles (Reader)
West, Timothy (Reader)
20 The Seaman's Tale 02:12
West, Timothy (Reader)
21 Here being the Seaman's Tale 04:23
West, Timothy (Reader)
Disc 3
1 Sir John had risen some little time ago 01:52
West, Timothy (Reader)
2 The monk began to stare upon this wife 03:46
West, Timothy (Reader)
3 This monk made answer as I tell you here 02:59
West, Timothy (Reader)
4 And afterwards, Sir John with gravity 02:46
West, Timothy (Reader)
5 On the first Sunday after he was gone 03:22
West, Timothy (Reader)
6 His wife was ready at the gate to greet him 03:43
West, Timothy (Reader)
Shanks, Rosalind (Non-Classical Artist)
7 The Prioress's Tale 01:41
Shanks, Rosalind (Non-Classical Artist)
8 The Prologue of the Prioress's Tale 02:07
Shanks, Rosalind (Non-Classical Artist)
9 Here begins the Prioress's Tale 03:10
Shanks, Rosalind (Non-Classical Artist)
10 This child passed through the Jewish colony 03:44
Shanks, Rosalind (Non-Classical Artist)
11 The Christians on the street, that came and went 02:52
Shanks, Rosalind (Non-Classical Artist)
12 Therefore I sing, and sing I must indeed 02:07
Shanks, Rosalind (Non-Classical Artist)
Barrett, Sean (Reader)
13 The Manciple's Tale 03:09
Barrett, Sean (Reader)
14 Then to the Manciple spoke up our Host 02:44
Barrett, Sean (Reader)
15 Here begins the Manciple's Tale 03:00
Barrett, Sean (Reader)
16 But to the end for which I first began 05:06
Barrett, Sean (Reader)
17 After this wife sent for her paramour 03:49
Barrett, Sean (Reader)
18 And to the crow he cried again 02:39
Barrett, Sean (Reader)
19 Thy first of actions, son, and thy chief care 02:36
Barrett, Sean (Reader)
Maloney, Michael (Reader)
20 The Physician's Tale 02:57
Maloney, Michael (Reader)
21 If she was unexcelled in beauty thus 03:34
Maloney, Michael (Reader)
22 This maid of whom I tell did not require 03:32
Maloney, Michael (Reader)
23 On this, and he not herem 03:45
Maloney, Michael (Reader)
24 O mercy, O dear father 03:31
Maloney, Michael (Reader)
25 The words of the Host to the Physician and the Pardoner 02:12
Maloney, Michael (Reader)

Total Playing Time: 03:32:58