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    James Fedo Professor Myron Coleman LITR 210 19 October 2017 The Threads Connecting The Canterbury Tales: A Comparison of The Miller’s Tale and The Merchant’s Tale The Canterbury Tales by Chaucer, is a collection of stories, allegedly told to Chaucer by a band of travelers while making a pilgrimage to the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket. Each story contains different plots, characters, influences, and storytelling devices. However, at least every tale is connected to another, either by contrast,…

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    Canterbury Tales Women

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    isn't intimidated by anyone. All of these outstanding qualities yet Chaucer makes her toothless and ugly. He also made her character have five different husbands and many affairs making bountiful amounts of men to become saddened. In part of the prologue, the Wife Of Bath speaks from a man's point of view about holy matrimony and women. Here they state: "She whispered to the water, near the ground,..." (“The Wife of Bath”, 119-124). These lines are meant to show that women can't hold secrets…

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    Those of Importance (An Addition to Canterbury Tales) Around the year 1300, Chaucer wrote “The Canterbury Tales”. In this story, he begins to describe the people that he takes on his adventure to Canterbury. As he begins to describe each person who embarks on this journey alongside him, he tells of who they are and the kind of affect they might have on other people. After he tells of who these people are, he then makes the effort to tell of personal stories from each of the characters. Through…

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    In The Canterbury Tales, the narrator introduces the audience to a handful of pilgrims going on a pilgrimage. The pilgrims are introduced and they meet the Host of the hotel. The Host creates a story telling game and explains the rules. He wants two stories on the way there and two on the way back home from each pilgrim. Furthermore, the stories are judged based on their moral education and entertainment value. Comparing “The Knight’s Tale” and “The Pardoner’s Tale” considering the rules, “The…

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    In The Prologue of The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer illustrates the medieval society. The Prologue is an introduction to the thirty-one characters, who go on a pilgrimage to Canterbury. The people in pilgrimage want to visit the relics of Saint Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. Two of these characters are the Knight and the Squire. The Knight is the father of the Squire, and they both are warriors and gentleman, who ride their horses gallantly. Even though they have these similarities…

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    What do you think it would take to tell the perfect story? The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer is a collection of stories put together into one narrative. In this story, the characters go on pilgrimage. While on this pilgrimage they are to tell stories, with one being the winner. In order to be the winner, the Host get to be the judge of it, your tale has to be entertaining as well as morally sound. Both “The Miller’s Tale” and “The Reeve’s Tale” tell embarrassing stories about one another…

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    Chaucer utilizes his intelligence and storytelling ability to criticize medieval English society in his compilation of short stories, The Canterbury Tales. The church's power and its ability to harshly punish dissenters forced Chaucer to use his stories as a way of questioning established religious beliefs and commenting on his society. Chaucer appears to have enjoyed criticizing established religion and societal norms, and uses his texts to illustrate these criticisms. The most prominent…

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    consist of a prologue defining all of the pilgrims and individual stories that the pilgrims tell. Each character has his or her own unique personality that is comparable to some well-known personalities. In The Canterbury Tales prologue, there are several characters that are described. One of them is the Monk. Monks are supposed to take up a religious life, and devote their life to serving their belief. They commit themselves to vows such as abstinence, poverty, and compliance. In the…

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    Ever think about what pilgrims were really meant for? The General Prologue From The Canterbury Tales had a completely different meaning for pilgrims then what comes to mind. The Canterbury Tales is Tales told by Geoffrey Chaucer. They run at least twenty-four stories written in Middle English. The tales were originally published in 1478. Multiple characters play apart in the tales, such as the Pardoner, The Wife of Bath, The Knight, The Miller, and the Narrator. The Canterbury Tales were…

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    to them. Regarding the prologue, it was used to create an image of Frank Conroy that the reader would be able to understand; it was a way to introduce his flaws immediately, so the audience would understand where they came from as they read the memoir itself. The epilogue is much more dramatic, in a sense. Its tone is almost manic, and seems to be the “this is what I’ve become” of the novel. His syntax has changed to where it seems like the Frank Conroy you met in the prologue has changed as you…

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