prologue$64403$ - translation to greek
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prologue$64403$ - translation to greek

PART OF THE CANTERBURY TALES
The Miller’s Prologue and Tale; Miller's Tale; The Millers Tale; The Miller's Prologue; The Millers Prologue; Miller's Prologue; MIllers Prologue; Millers Tale; The Millers Prologue and Tale; Miller's Prologue and Tale; Millers Prologue and Tale; The Miller's Prologue and Tale
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  • Door with Cat Hole (carved oak, Late Medieval period, 1450–1500, France, [[Walters Art Museum]]) This door, carved with a linen-fold decoration, was probably a back or interior door of a middle-class home. It is remarkable for its cat hole. Few doors with cat holes have survived from this early period, but the 14th-century English writer Geoffrey Chaucer described one in the "Miller's Tale" from his Canterbury Tales. In the narrative, a servant whose knocks go unanswered, uses the hole to peek in: "An hole he foond, ful lowe upon a bord/ Ther as the cat was wont in for to crepe,/ And at the hole he looked in ful depe,/ And at the last he hadde of hym a sighte."

prologue      
n. πρόλογος

Definition

prologue
¦ noun
1. a separate introductory section of a literary or musical work.
an introductory scene in a play.
2. an event or action leading to another.
Origin
ME: from OFr., via L. from Gk prologos, from pro- 'before' + logos 'saying'.

Wikipedia

The Miller's Tale

"The Miller's Tale" (Middle English: The Milleres Tale) is the second of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (1380s–1390s), told by the drunken miller Robin to "quite" (a Middle English term meaning requite or pay back, in both good and negative ways) "The Knight's Tale". The Miller's Prologue is the first "quite" that occurs in the tales.