The General Prologue was most likely composed ahead of schedule in the piece of the Canterbury Tales and offers an intriguing correlation point to a considerable lot of the individual stories itself. Obviously, it doesn't coordinate to the stories as we have them in various ways: the Nun's Priest and the Second Nun are not depicted, and, most altogether, the work as we have it doesn't mirror the Host's arrangement. First off, the journey just appears to go similarly as Canterbury and just the storyteller tells two stories in transit there, with the various explorers telling just a solitary story