Literary Devices Used In The Pardoner's Tale

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In “The Pardoner’s Tale,” a story in The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, a Pardoner tells the tale of how three men who are drunk go out to find death. On this journey to find death, they run into an old man who they accuse of death’s spy, and he tells them that they will find death under a tree. Finding this tree, they stumble upon finding lots of money, and in the end, they had killed each other over it. There are literary elements/devices used to make the story more interesting. Geoffrey Chaucer successfully uses literary elements/devices in this story which are personification, irony, and foreshadowing.
Using personification, death is being personified by the people in the story. In lines 72-76, the tavern-knave told the three drunken

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