[Bards] Prose Tales
Ken Theriot
kentheriot at ravenboymusic.com
Tue May 1 14:54:27 PDT 2007
-----Original Message-----
From: bards-bounces at lists.ansteorra.org
[mailto:bards-bounces at lists.ansteorra.org] On Behalf Of Jay Rudin
Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2007 3:12 PM
To: Ansteorran Bardic list
Subject: [Bards] Prose Tales
Aesop's fables are in prose, and he was known as a story-teller (but he's a
slave). In an Egyptian myth the princess claims that he told her the
stories.
The Decameron is a Renaissance Italian story of people telling prose stories
to each other. This is not equivalent to a bard performing in court, but it
is equivalent to a bardic circle.
Similarly, the Canterbury Tales tell the story of pilgrims telling each
other stories on the road. While Chaucer's description of the pilgrimage
and the tales they told is in verse, there is no implication that the
pilgrims were all versifiers. The idea that the Miller, or the Reeve, could
invent a tale in verse boggles the mind.
Robin of Gilwell / Jay Rudin
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