Canterbury Tales is about a man named Geoffrey Chaucer who’s going on an adventure to Canterbury with a group of people and Chaucer describes the people who they are, about them. The people are very interesting in many ways that I myself would never expect from people now or then so it’s very interesting to think of people and to think oh hey I’m sure there’s people like this now days. The way they dressed then is different it looks like they’re wearing leggings and the dresses with different pieces of material just randomly sewed onto it.…
Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is a unique collection of tales from a virous group of individuals on a spiritual pilgrimage. Each person in the collection comes from all walks of life. For example Hubert the friar who knows the taverns in just about every town better than a poor house, a young man given the name The Clerk who spends every last cent he has on books, and a Doctor who is good at what he does and made a lot of money during the Plague. Every person is different in their own way but read carefully people of today could relate to one or more or even a bit of each one, whether it be their personalities, their looks or their beliefs. Whatever their reason, everyone on the pilgrimage have one thing in common. They are there to find…
In Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales," two young men of the Middle Ages, stand in sharp contrast to each other. The clerk and the squire are of similar ages but are very different. The clerk is a member of the middle class, has attended Oxford and studied Aristotle, while the squire, a member of the upper class, has been educated in the arts of chivalry.…
In the journey of Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer paints a vivid image of the medieval world. He brings forth three prominent concepts in the General Prologue, Pardoner's Prologue and Tale, and The Wife of Bath’s Tale. All tales satirically drenched with persuasive ideas, most would agree that his iconoclastic stories are dangerous for introducing aloud a different view on the church, gender relations and economic divisions. Creating doubt against the morals and true intentions of the church, bringing to light the inequality between genders and proposing a division between economic classes.…
Geoffrey Chaucer's, The Canterbury Tales was written in the late fourteenth century. It is a compilation of short stories, set in the Medieval Period England, told by travelers who are going on a pilgrimage to the Cathedral at Canterbury. Among the traveling band, a Monk of likely Franciscan ties was a pilgrim of high rank and nobility.…
Geoffrey Chaucer portrayed a cross section of medieval society though The Canterbury Tales. "The Prologue" or foreword of this work serves as an introduction to each of the thirty one characters involved in the tales. Two of these characters are the K<br>ght and the Squire, who share a father and son relation. These individuals depart on a religious pilgrimage to a cathedral in Canterbury. The Squire, opposed to the Knight, goes for a vacation instead of religious purposes. His intent is not as genuin<br>and pure as his father's. Though the Knight and the Squire are from the same feudal class and vocation, they differ in the fact that the Knight represents how society should have been; and the Squire depicts an accurate portrayal of how it actually was.<br><br>Chivalry, heroism, and modesty delineate the Knight, whose upright standards and principles illustrate a true gentleman; these characteristics are not evident in the Squire. Even though the Knight has won many wars, he is careful not to brag about his <br>ctories. The most recurrent point in the description of the Knight is the abundance and importance of his conquests; however, the Squire's battles are barely mentioned. While the entirety of the Squire's battles are summed up in two lines ("he had se<br> some service with the cavalry / In Flanders and Artois and Picardy"), the list of the Knight's battles dominates his description (Chaucer 120). The Squire's battles are not fought in the interest of his chivalry. On the other hand, the Knight is disti<br>uished and chivalrous because of his unconditional devotion. Chaucer admired the valiant and noble Knight above the overbearing Squire.<br><br>Regarding clothing and appearance, the humble Knight chooses to wear a plain armor and tunic while the Squire frivolously indulges in excesses. The Squire is an extremely vain individual, taking pains to improve his appearance. His superfluous appare<br>is clean and bright and his hair has "locks as curly as if they…
Geoffrey Chaucer’s the “Miller’s Tale” presents a realistic, sharply detailed picture of common medieval village life in the late fourteenth century by focusing on personal, familial, social and occupational aspects of the characters John, Nicholas and Absolon. Chaucer created many works in the late fourteenth century but in or around 1378, Chaucer began to develop his vision of an English poetry that would be linguistically accessible to all—obedient neither to the court, whose official language was French, nor to the Church, whose official language was Latin. Instead, Chaucer wrote in the vernacular, the English that was spoken in and around London in his day. Through his choice of language, Chaucer shows how the late fourteenth century medieval society influences his writing. Although the “Miller’s Tale” is only one of about twenty-two completed tales of The Canterbury Tales, the tale of the Miller represents evident examples of striking medieval characterizations. The tale of the Miller is set in Oxford in the medieval era of the late fourteenth century. The characterizations of John, Nicholas and Absolon in the “Miller’s Tale” support a detailed picture of a typical medieval life through the focus of the character’s occupational, familial, personal and social aspects of their lives.…
In The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, many characters go on a religious pilgrimage to Canterbury to visit the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket. On the way to Canterbury, each person on the journey tells a tale. Whoever tells the best story, gets rewarded a lavish free meal. The pilgrimage includes people from the nobility, clergy, and commoner class. For each class, Chaucer develops many different character types that were representative of the society of the time. With a broad spectrum of people and action, The Canterbury tales consists of many different ideas such as social satire, courtly love/ chivalry,morality, and corruption and deceit. One of the most important ideas of the story is that Chaucer puts forward a criteria that…
situational irony as it completely contradicts the description of Chaucer's "gentle" knight (5). Chaucer points out…
Although based on classical Greek mythology Chaucer writes in medieval terms. There is still great debate today about the values of the medieval knight that so often appears in Chaucer's work. Reading courtly poetry and stories of medieval…
(Slide 1) After declaring that “Chaucer followed Nature everywhere,” and that God’s plenty can be found in his works, John Dryden, in his Preface to the Fables, Ancient and Modern, considers why Chaucer includes “low characters” in the Canterbury Tales, such as “the Reeve, the Miller, the Shipman, the Merchant, the Sumner, and above all, the Wife of Bath, in the prologue to her tale.” This tendency toward the low, Dryden suggests, is a quality that Chaucer shares with Boccaccio, whom he also includes in the Fables. “What need [had] they,” Dryden asks, “of introducing such characters, where obscene words were proper in their mouths.” Dryden’s answer to this question is simple: there is no need for such characters, with their obscene words. And, in the case of the Canterbury Tales, the solution is equally simple; Dryden omits from his collection the tales containing these obscene words.…
Authors often have an agenda when creating their works. These authors create their work with a specific agenda in mind to serve the purpose of making their own personal views apparent to readers. The Canterbury Tales--a collection of tales told by various people throughout a pilgrimage to Canterbury--serves as Geoffrey Chaucer’s own lament about the corruption of the Catholic Church in 14th century Europe. The pilgrims taking part in this pilgrimage are not necessarily the most pious pilgrims in the world: for many of the travelers, this pilgrimage is a tourist expedition rather than a devout religious quest. Chaucer utilizes this anthology of works to develop his ideas about the imperfections of the Catholic Church and how many people viewed…
One type will be to tell how the two characters' own qualities (That is reflected in the prologues.) are reflecting upon the society of Chaucer’s time. For example, what does the greediness of the Pardoner say about the Church of Chaucer’s time? What does the description of the Wife of Bath say about women’s roles in society at that time? What was Chaucer trying to change?…
Knowing that the middle class was not interested in lofty philosophical literature, Chaucer wrote his work as an extremely comical and entertaining piece that would be more interesting to his audience. Also, Chaucer tried to reach the middle class by writing The Canterbury Tales in English, the language of the middle class rather than French, the language of the educated upper class. The most impressive aspect of Chaucer’s writing is how he incorporated into his piece some of his own controversial views of society, but yet kept it very entertaining and light on the surface level. One of the most prevalent of these ideas was his view that certain aspects of the church had become corrupt. This idea sharply contrasted previous Middle Age thought, which excepted the church’s absolute power and goodness unquestionably.…
In Chaucer's General Prologue there varies many different characters of all sorts within every social class. Many of these characters kind of reflect off of each other or they are polar opposite of another as well. It goes both ways. But within this prologue i've learned there's not just one or two different people there are many different types of people i'm assuming of all races. So many roles back then compared to now.…