• "The Parson's Tale" seems, from the evidence of its prologue, to have been intended as the final tale of Geoffrey Chaucer's poetic cycle The Canterbury Tales.
  • The Parson’s Tale has to be the least approachable of all the Canterbury Tales, with the possible exception of Chaucer’s Tale of Melibee.
  • The Parson's Tale.
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  • Harvard's Geoffrey Chaucer Website https://chaucer.fas.harvard.edu/pages/parsons-tale.
  • The Parson’s Tale. Jer. 6 . State super vias, et videte, et interrogate de viis antiquis gue sit via bona, et ambulate in ea; et invenietis refrigerium animabus vestris, etc.
  • [Under the fourth head, of good works, the Parson says: –] The courteous Lord Jesus Christ will that no good work be lost, for in somewhat it shall avail.
  • The Parson's Tale. Jer. 6. State super vias, et videte, et interrogate de viis antiquis, que sit via bona, et ambulate in ea; et invenietis refrigerium animabus vestris, etc.
  • The nature of the Parson’s Tale makes it stand out among the Canterbury Tales, and the Parson remarks upon the uniqueness of his tale explicitly in his Prologue.
  • The Parson's Prologue and Tale. ... 4593The Canterbury Tales (unsourced) — The Parson's Prologue and TaleGeoffrey Chaucer.
  • The Parson’s Tale seems to use a number of sources, including mainly 13th-century Latin and French treatises on penance and on the seven deadly sins.