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    Miller's Tale

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    includes a great variety of comic tales‚ in both prose and verse‚ and in a variety of more or less distinct genres. For students of Chaucer‚ the most important comic genre is the fabliau (fabliau is the singular‚ fabliaux the plural). Chaucer’s Miller’s tale‚ Reeve’s Tale‚ Shipman’s Tale‚ Summoner’s tale‚ and the fragmentary Cook’s Tale are all fabliaux‚ and other tales -- such as the Merchant’s Tale -- show traces of the genre: "A fabliau is a brief comic tale in verse‚ usually scurrilous and often

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    Title: The Turn of the Screw The Turn of the Screw is an idiom used many times in literature and even in everyday language. I was unfamiliar with this idiom and I believed that the author was foreshadowing how someone is going to lose their screw meaning they are going to go crazy. I was partially right since one perception of story is that someone does go crazy‚ but the actual meaning of the idiom is to make something bad even worse. The author uses this phrase in his story as well. The first time

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    Canterbury Tales

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    The Canterbury Tales: Review Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales is considered as one of the major beginning marks in English Literature. The Canterbury Tales‚ written in 14th century is a collection of short stories mainly in verse form. The stories in The Canterbury Tales are told by a group of 24 pilgrims on pilgrimage from Southwark to Canterbury to visit the shrine of St. Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathedral. A Prologue to The Canterbury Tales introduces the major characters of the

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    Canterbury Tales

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    In The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer‚ A band of pilgrims traveling to Canterbury take turns telling stories. The main characters of each pilgrim’s tale face their reckoning and whether they are punished or absolved; their judgment is specific to the pilgrim who told the tale. The Knight from the Wife of Bath’s tale is judged and forgiven when and the three men from the Pardoner’s tale meet their end when they let greed‚ what the Pardoner calls the root of evil‚ impair their judgment. The

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    The Canturbury Tales

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    narrative in The Canterbury Tales. What does this narrative device bring to the audience’s experience of the work? What does it allow the author‚ Geoffrey Chaucer‚ to do? Use examples from the readings to support your answer. B. Consider the following quote from the Wife of Bath’s prologue: "Experience‚ though no authority / Were in this world‚ were good enough for me‚ / To speak of woe that is in all marriage." Write an essay in which you discuss whether "The Wife of Bath’s Tale" supports or does not

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    The Handmaids Tale

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    Critique “The Handmaid’s Tale‚” written by Margaret Atwood is a fictional book that takes place in the near future when all of women’s rights were taken away. The book is from the point of view of a girl who just lost her family‚ all her money‚ her possessions and is later taken away to be a handmaid. This all took place because of the overthrow of the government. As a handmaid it is her duty to obey all new laws and to reproduce children for the “higher class” or she will face the wall (be hung)

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    The Werewolf Tale

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    The Werewolf Tale Jason Marquez October 31‚ 2012 CBI Sr. English‚ Q1 “The Wife’s Story” is a tale by Ursula K. Le Guin is a very surprising science fiction story that reverses the werewolf idea. A wolf turns into a man and scares the living daylights out of his wolf wife and wolf children. What makes this story interesting is that Le Guin tricks us‚ throughout much of the story‚ into believing that the tale is about humans. Le Guin point was to make the whole story ironic because the reader

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    period‚ people took anything not specified in sexual connotations. Realizing this‚ the authors of the time used this to their advantage and laid a heavy underlying sexual atmosphere as a basis for their stories. Henry James does just that in his Turn of the Screw. Though never directly stating so‚ his main character suffers from sexual repression that came along with her position in the Victorian age and eventually acts upon it‚ while the ghosts in the story then serve as protection for the children

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    In The Turn of the Screw by Henry James‚ there are many disputes over the question of the governess’s sanity. While some claim that the apparitions she sees are real‚ deeming her sane‚ others believe that they are materializations of her own imagination. The governess is sane because of her ability to think rationally‚ the apparitions’ resemblance to previous Bly workers‚ and Miles’s acknowledgment of Peter Quint. The governess is sane because she is able to think rationally before acting upon

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    Pardoner's Tale

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    books and stories. In Chaucer’s book “The Pardoners Tale‚” it takes the shape of an old man. He is very old and weary and seems like a completely innocent character. But‚ in this tale‚ he is the cause of three deaths. He is the very embodiment of death itself. The first clue to the old man’s identity occurs when he provided the rioters with the directions to find Death. “”Well sirs‚” he said‚ “if it be your design To find out death‚ turn up this crooked way Towards that grove‚ I left

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