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    Wife of Bath Tale

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    Can an Immoral Storyteller tell a Moral Tale? Geoffery Chaucer has gone into such depth to describe the characters in Canterbury Tales. He focuses on their immoral character‚ physical appearance‚ and their main purpose. Many of Chaucer’s stories parallel with each other acknowledging the sinful nature of the characters. The comparison of the three stories “Miller’s Tale‚ Pardoner’s Tale‚ and The Wife of Bath Tale”‚ will show how immoral can sometimes bring moral values into a person’s life. Immorality

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    English essay Kye Chocolat Select one of the following themes from the novel and explain how Harris uses literary techniques to comment on human nature - Temptation Chocolat is a novel written by Jeanne Harris and does not only focus on the pleasures of chocolate but also the temptation it possesses. It is set in the French countryside town of Lasquenet-Souz-Tannes. Vianne Rocher the protagonist opens a chololaterie during the first week of lent which eventually frees the community entrapped in its

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    The Prioress‚ the Friar‚ and the Miller in the Prologue to The Canterbury Tales provide exceptional examples of what H.S. Bennett meant when he asserted that ‘no detail was too small” for Chaucer to see. ➢ Chaucer is a careful and astute observer. o Detailed descriptions of each characters • Exposes character’s flaws/weaknesses • Social/political ➢ Uses satire to deliver a message o Prioress and friar: Criticizes the church – revealing the corruption of the actions of some characters ➢ Chaucer uses

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    Tolkien has experienced a resurgence of interest in the last two decades-in a large part thanks to Peter Jackson’s film adaptations of both The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit. However I do not wish to look at the movies‚ or indeed at any of Tolkien’s more prevalent work. I wish to focus on his poetry‚ the poems woven into the narrative of his popular novels (including revised versions published in The History of Middle-earth series) as well as his stand-alone pieces that may have little to do with

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    In the Canterbury Tales Prologue‚ Chaucer felt that the Church’s chaos experienced during the medieval era contributed to the declining trust of the clergy and left people spiritually demolished. The repeated outbreaks that the church experienced weakened the church by emphasizing the clergy’s inability to face obstacles. The clergy’s inability to provide help for people during a period of suffering caused people to question the values of the church. People looked for ways to gain control over their

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    Canterbury Tales

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    Brooke Schweitzer Dr. O’Callaghan Eng 402 April 11‚ 2010 Springtime in The Canterbury Tales _See how the lilies of the field grow. …Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these.-Matthew 6:28-29_ Springtime and beauty is inevitably linked in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Chaucer uses the images of springtime from the very beginning of the prologue to promote the idea of renewal and overall joyfulness. Not only is it used to establish tone or

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    The Canterbury Tales AP Literature & Composition October 7‚ 2009 A fabliau is aptly categorized as a scandalous tale meant to satirize the bourgeois through the depiction of bourgeois characters. This is the genre Chaucer writes “The Miller’s Tale‚” from his The Canterbury Tales‚ in so he can distinguish the social class levels of the people on the pilgrimage. Chaucer shows us the differences by paralleling then transforming certain aspects of this fabliau with the same elements of the chivalric

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    The pardoner is a priest whom most people think of as being honest and respectful‚ however‚ in reality he is a hypocrite whom takes advantage of the less fortunate and plays with their emotions. The pardoner lived off the money of the church people whom believed in him and his beliefs. He took advantage of their vulnerability and used their weakness to obtain more goods for his own personal gain. The pardoner is thought of without sin but in reality is the most sinful person of them all. This tale

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    “Chaucer was writing at a time when there was no tradition of personal poetry in a later Romantic sense: a poet never made his individual emotions the subject matter of his poetry.” (Woolf) Chaucer is often times regarded as the father of English literature. He is also widely considered one of the most significant‚ if not the top poet of the Middle Ages. One of his most incredible texts is known as the Canterbury Tales. This is a collection of over twenty stories that were written in Middle English

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    Introductory Fable

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    The Importance of the Introductory Fable “The Cock and the Jasp” is an important fable as it sets the tone for the reader. However‚ it raises the question as to why this fable was chosen as the first. According to Rosemary Greentree‚ Henryson’s ‘use of “The Cock and the Jasp” traditionally an introductory fable‚ as the first in his collection shows a degree of conformity to accustomed order‚ when it suits his purpose’ (483). However‚ one could argue that it is the most straight forward fable as

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