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THE MANCIPLE’S PROLOGUE AND TALE

THE MANCIPLE’S PROLOGUE AND TALE

The Host pokes fun at the Cook, riding at the back of the company, blind drunk. The Cook is unable to honor the Host’s request that he tell a tale, and the Manciple criticizes him for his drunkenness. The Manciple relates the legend of a white crow, taken from the Roman poet Ovid’s Metamorphoses and one of the tales in The Arabian Nights. In it, Phoebus’s talking white crow informs him that his wife is cheating on him. Phoebus kills the wife, pulls out the crow’s white feathers, and curses it with blackness.

THE MANCIPLE’S PROLOGUE AND TALE THE MANCIPLE’S PROLOGUE AND TALE Reviewed by Debjeet on December 31, 2022 Rating: 5

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