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The Friar In Chaucer's Canterbury Tales

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The Friar In Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
The Friar is the least moral of all of the other pilgrims according to Chaucer’s “General Prologue.” He is the one clergy member who breaks all four of the promised vows of the church. For example, “He’d fixed up many a marriage, giving each of his young women what he could afford her.” (Chaucer 216-217). He has many mistresses and simply sells them off when he is finished with them. This breaks the vow of chastity that all the clergy have to follow. Another vow he breaks is the vow of poverty, which says that he should not live a glamorous life but should give his money to the less fortunate. “But anywhere a profit might accrue, courteous he was and lowly of service too.” (Chaucer 253-254). In this excerpt, it tells us that The Friar tries

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