Tales of a Wayside Inn
From Wikisource
| Tales of a Wayside Inn by |
| Tales of a Wayside Inn is a book consisting of a collection of poems written by American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. First published in 1863, the poems are told to a group of adults in the tavern of the Wayside Inn in Sudbury, Massachusetts by the landlord of the establishment. The most famous poem to be included in the collection is "Paul Revere's Ride".— Excerpted from Tales of a Wayside Inn on Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. |
[edit] Part First
- The Wayside Inn
- The Landlord's Tale
- The Student's Tale
- The Spanish Jew's Tale
- The Sicilian's Tale
- The Musician's Tale
- The Theologian's Tale
- The Poet's Tale
- Finale
[edit] Part Second
- Prelude
- The Sicilian's Tale
- The Spanish Jew's Tale
- The Student's Tale
- The Musician's Tale
- The Poet's Tale
- The Theologian's Tale
- The Student's Second Tale
- Finale
[edit] Part Third
- Prelude
- The Spanish Jew's Tale
- The Poet's Tale
- The Student's Tale
- The Theologian's Tale
- The Sicilian's Tale
- The Spanish Jew's Second Tale
- The Musician's Tale
- The Landlord's Tale
- Finale
| This work published before January 1, 1923 is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. |