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Page "Summary of Decameron tales" ¶ 68
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Neifile and narrates
Neifile narrates this tale, which, like I, 1, ridicules the Catholic tradition of discerning the Saints.
Neifile narrates.
Neifile narrates.
Neifile narrates.

Neifile and tale
Neifile tells this tale.

Neifile and which
Neifile tells this story which has no previous literary recording.

Neifile and .
Neifile tells both the second story of the book and the second anti-Catholic story.
Neifile presides as queen during the third day.

narrates and tale
Filomena narrates this tale, which portrays the main character as wise and in a positive light.
Dioneo, who has acquired the reputation of the most bawdy of the storytellers, narrates this tale.
Emilia narrates yet another anti-clerical tale, the fourth of the day so far.
Elissa narrates another tale of censure.
Pampinea narrates the last tale of the day, another tale of censure ( the sixth of the day ).
Pampinea narrates this tale of which no earlier version is known.
Emilia narrates this tale, which has no known previous version.
Dioneo narrates what is by far the most obscene and bawdy tale in the Decameron.
Fiammetta narrates this tale, whose earliest source is a French manuscript written by a man named Thomas.
Emilia narrates this tale, one part of which ( the motif of using extra fine bow strings ) supposedly is based on a real event, according to a chronicle by Giovanni Villani.
Filostrato narrates this tale, which some claim bears a resemblance to " Lai du Laustic " by the famed late 12th century poet Marie de France.
Pampinea narrates this tale.
Filomena narrates this tale, which many see as revealing Boccaccio's opinion of what makes a good or bad storyteller, just as portions of Hamlet and A Midsummer Night's Dream contain Shakespeare's opinion of what makes a good or bad actor.
Panfilo narrates this tale.
Filostrato narrates this tale which modern readers with their ideas of gender equality can appreciate.
Filostrato narrates this tale, which Boccaccio certainly took from Apuleius's The Golden Ass, the same source as tale V, 10.
Pampinea narrates this version of a common medieval tale which originates from the Hitopadesha of India.
As usual, Dioneo narrates the last tale of the day.
Elissa narrates this tale, the first in which Bruno and Buffalmacco appear.
Fiammetta narrates this tale.
Lauretta narrates another tale about Bruno and Buffalmacco and their practical jokes.

narrates and which
Next, inside this first flashback, the Lady of the title narrates another story, presented in flashback form, but with cutaways inside it back to events occurring in the time frame in which she is doing her narrating.
Neither should it be confused with the surviving Acts of Barnabas, which narrates an account of Barnabas ' travels, martyrdom and burial, and which is generally thought to have been written in Cyprus sometime after 431.
An always extant being called Qfwfq narrates all of the stories save two, each of which is a memory of an event in the history of the universe.
Each time Albert appears, he brings with him a group of clips featuring sports bloopers and outstanding plays, which he narrates and dubs the " Albert Achievement Awards.
Elissa narrates this story, which shares its theme of a woman's vengeance for being spurned with many ancient stories.
Dioneo narrates this story which pokes fun at the worship of relics.
Pampinea narrates this tale, for which no known earlier source exists.
Emilia narrates this tale, which probably originated in Asia.
Filomena narrates this story, which Boccaccio may have taken from Alphonsus's " Disciplina clericalis.
An early example of the frame story, or framing device, is employed in the One Thousand and One Nights, in which the character Scheherazade narrates a set of tales ( most often fairy tales ) to the Sultan Shahriyar over many nights.
The Dark Night ( from which the spiritual term takes its name ) narrates the journey of the soul from her bodily home to her union with God.
Eusebius of Caesarea references Saracens in his Ecclesiastical history, in which he narrates an account wherein Dionysus, Bishop of Alexandria mentions Saracens in a letter while describing the Roman emperor Decius ' persecution: " Many were, in the Arabian mountain, enslaved by the barbarous sarkenoi.

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