Augustine of Canterbury

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    ‘The Summoner’s tale’ and ‘The Pardoner’s tale’ of the Canterbury Tales: Deception in language The Summoner, Friar and Pardoner use deception in their language to deceive the pilgrims. The Oxford English Dictionary (2014a) defines deception as “deliberately causing someone to believe something that is not true, especially for personal gain.” Both ‘The Summoner’s Tale’ and ‘The Pardoner’s Tale’ of the Canterbury Tales question the truthfulness of language. This essay will argue how the language…

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    narrative, The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer satirizes the thirty pilgrims on their pilgrimage using a story within a story. The thirty pilgrims consist of a cross-section of fourteenth century England, including aristocrats, clergy, middle class, trade class, and the peasants and omitting only royalty and serfs. They congregate at the Tabard Inn, Southwark, directly outside of London, and make their journey to their final destination, Saint Thomas Becket’s shrine in Canterbury. The Host,…

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    Geoffrey Chaucer uses the threefold narrative frame in The Canterbury Tales to provide his own personal reactions on each character and the stories they tell. With this narrative frame, Chaucer has both characters, the Pardoner and the Wife of Bath, represent a more general commentary on society, not only having an opinion on each pilgrim, but also having a strong critique on the society in which the pilgrims preside. Both the Pardoner’s and the Wife of Bath’s prologues is similar, containing…

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    Marriage: The Canterbury Tales We read and analyze The Canterbury Tales as if they are isolated individual stories. Yet the lively dialogue is what interconnects each character’s story into a whole comedic affect. It’s interesting to point out that each of the characters are tied into one common theme: marriage. Painting the words he wants to each character to speak, Chaucer displays a critical view on marriage. From each tale the common theme specifically tied to marriage, Chaucer points out…

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    In The Canterbury Tales, Chaucer describing the characters in the opposite way they are in normal society. The knight, King, and women are all in roles that are opposite to what these characters are known for. Chaucer shows his support of feminist ideas by the knight taking advantage of the maiden, the king giving the right to punish the knight to the queen, and letting the old hag about her and the knights future. The main character in “The Wife of Bath” was a knight who took advantage of…

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    The Concept of Charity; “The Canterbury Tales” Throughout the “General Prologue” Chaucer presents a vast majority of characters in the mid 1400’s to represent human's instinct of dishonesty and corruption. Throughout all of Chaucer’s characters that he portrays as the twenty nine pilgrims, three in particular stand out due to their interaction with charity. During this time period of the mid 1400’s the idea of charity was seen as a good religious and human trait. Out of these three…

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    In 1999, HBO created a short three episode television series covering some of the most memorable tales in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales. The Claymation with the addition of various other animation styled series covered such stories as, The nun's priest tale, The wife of Bath’s tale, The millers Tale and The Pardoners tale. While The Canterbury tales series gave an easily understandable view of Chaucer’s collection of tales it leaves out many important pieces of text as well as symbols…

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    Insight into Human Nature in Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales The trip of all trips that was told from generation to generation is one that was not actually taken but we are inspired by the personal voyage of Chaucer himself. Geoffrey Chaucer wrote about this “trip” to bring attention to peoples beliefs. The variety of characters allow us to see how people came about their views and the different ways they went about practicing them. Chaucer tried to have at least one character that…

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    Did you know there is a crater on the moon named for Geoffrey Chaucer? Here on Earth he is best known for writing The Canterbury Tales, a collection of stories, written in middle English at the end of the 14th century, at the end of the Hundreds war. One of the best tales is "The Pardoner's Tale." Geoffrey Chaucer is the first poet to be buried in Poets corner of Westminster Abbey. Though Chaucer died more than 600 years ago, he has more than 2,100 fans on Facebook. Also he had a part time job…

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    eoffery Chaucer, the greatest English poet of his lifetime, is estimated to have been born in 1343. Throughout his life, Chaucer became a page in a royal house, a soldier, a diplomat, and even a royal clerk. Geoffery was born in to a middle class family, he was the son of a merchant. During the beginning of his life time, Chaucer worked for the wife of Lionel of Antwerp, the daughter-in-law of Edward III, as page. During his time as a soldier for the English Army in France, Chaucer was captured…

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