Tuesday, 25 October 2016
Another Dimension: a story
Wednesday, 19 October 2016
The reduced Canterbury Tales: Monk's Tale to Parson's Tale
(The challenge was to write a complete story in exactly 100 words. So here is Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tale with each tale reduced to 100 words. This post contains Tales nineteen to twenty-four.)
Follow these links for the other Tales in "100 word" versions:
Prologue and Knight's Tale to Wife of Bath's Tale
Friar's Tale to Franklin's Tale
Physician's Tale to Tale of Melibee
Click the titles for fuller accounts of each Tale
The reduced Canterbury Tales: Physician's Tale to Tale of Melibee
(The challenge was to write a complete story in exactly 100 words. So here is Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tale with each tale reduced to 100 words. This post contains Tales thirteen to eighteen.)
Click on the titles for fuller accounts of each Tale
The reduced Canterbury Tales: Friar's Tale to Franklin's Tale
(The challenge was to write a complete story in exactly 100 words. So here is Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales with each tale reduced to 100 words. This post contains Tales seven to twelve.)
A corrupt summoner meets a yeoman, who says he is a “fiend from hell”. The summoner reckons he might learn a few new tricks. The yeoman explains that he can only fulfil a curse if someone really means what they say and is not just expressing exasperation. The summoner tries to trick an old woman and take her new pan as well as her money. She tells the summoner to go to hell, so the yeoman asks her if she really means it, which she does unless the summoner repents. He does not, so is promptly whisked off to hell.
Summoner’s Tale
A friar visits Thomas and his wife, who have recently lost their child. Thomas is lying on a couch. He complains that they have paid money to many friars for prayers, without success, but the friar explains that they should have given their money to only one friar, namely himself. Thomas says that he has a special gift that the friar must reach for underneath him. This is an enormous fart. The pilgrims decide that a fart could be shared between friary members if delivered at the hub of a cartwheel with a friar at the end of each spoke.
Clerk’s Tale
Lord Walter marries Griselda, a poor village woman. When a daughter is born Walter takes her from Griselda and says that the baby will be killed, although this is not true. Four years later Griselda has a boy baby, but he is taken away when aged two and again Walter says he will be killed. Throughout, Griselda remains perfectly obedient to her husband. Later still, Walter says he will divorce Griselda and take a new wife, who is actually her daughter, now aged twelve. Griselda appeals to Walter not to treat her the same way, at which Walter comes clean.
Merchant’s Tale
Old man January has married young and pretty May. His young squire Damian fancies May and vice versa. Time passes. January, who has lost his sight, has a walled private garden but May makes a copy of the key to the gate and gives it to Damian. She suggests to Damian that he climb a pear tree in the garden when January takes May there. She offers to fetch a pear for January and has her wicked way with Damian. The god Pluto restores January’s sight, but goddess Proserpine ensures that January does not believe what he thinks he sees.
Squire’s Tale
At King Cambuskan’s birthday feast, a knight rides into his hall astride a magic brass horse, a gift from the King of Araby. The knight shows Cambuskan how it works. He also gives Princess Candace a magic ring that allows her to understand the speech of birds and to make herbal medicines. The next day Candace finds a wounded female falcon that tells a story of blighted love. She takes the falcon home and cures her.
That is all we get, although the Squire implies that more magical adventures are in store for the king, his daughter and his sons.
Franklin’s Tale
The lady Dorigen fears that her husband Arviragus will be shipwrecked on the Brittany rocks when he returns to her from fighting in Britain. Aurelius claims her if he can make the rocks disappear, and she agrees in jest. He offers to pays a magician to cause an exceptionally high tide that covers all the rocks, which he does. Arviragus returns safely, Dorigen confesses what she has agreed to, and Arviragus says that she must do what she has promised. Aurelius sees how distressed Dorigen is and releases her from her bond. The magician also releases Dorigen from his debt.
Tuesday, 18 October 2016
The reduced Canterbury Tales: Prologue to Wife of Bath's Tale
Prologue
Mine Host has a thought - suppose we pass the time by telling stories as we ride to Canterbury? I’ll write them down if you like – it could be fun!
Wednesday, 12 October 2016
Clerihews
Was by no means the worst
It was best to be wary
Of her sister Queen Mary
Queen Victoria
Went to a trattoria
Albert sat down and snoozed
She wasn’t amused
Jeremy Corbyn
Found it absorbin’
To take copious notes
When campaigning for votes
Theresa May
Was discovered one day
In search of an exit
Other than Brexit
Nigel Farage
Went to his garage
His car was resplendent
And, of course, independent
Sam Allardyce
Does not need asking twice
He’ll declare black is white
If the money is right
William the Second
Was generally reckoned
A total disgrace
As well as red in the face
Edmund Clerihew Bentley
Always did things gently
When it came to writing verse
He was never less than terse
Margaret Thatcher?
No-one could catch her
As everyone would learn
She was not one to turn
Anthony Sher
Did not star in Ben Hur
His talents shone clear
In his Stratford King Lear
General George Gorringe
Was eating an orange
To celebrate the time
He provided a rhyme
Donald J Trump
Was given a thump
His chances are shrinking
Or is this wishful thinking?
Hillary Clinton
Was putting a tint on
When seeking votes, east or west
It’s always good to look your best
William Shakespeare
Often makes appear
For me, lots and lots
Of ideas for good plots
Charles John Huffam Dickens
The plot often thickens
In Bleak House there’s thick mist
But not in Oliver Twist
Geoffrey Chaucer
Drank from a saucer
As did most of the males
In his Canterbury Tales
King Richard the Third
Might have thought it absurd
That his bones would long fester
Neath a car park in Leicester
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Was putting on a welly
When out popped a toad –
But it didn’t get an ode
Emperor Nero
Was never a hero
He wrote many a Latin idyll
But he never played the fiddle
Emperor Commodus
Never kept the job in focus
He thought himself a doughty fighter
Instead? A nasty little blighter
Alistair McGowan
Has audiences wowin’
Footy’s his obsession
But he makes a good impression
Tuesday, 4 October 2016
A Bad Spell
The three witches were sitting round the cauldron on the blasted heath when Witch One felt her thumbs get a bit itchy. For reasons best left unexplored, this appeared to be the equivalent of the doorbell ringing in more conventional domestic situations.