Modern Pilgrim: Politician The Politician wears his navy blue blazer‚ pleated pants‚ and red tie on all occasions. Though he may not looking or feeling the best‚ his personal team of makeup artists are there to help him at his time of need. Through age‚ his hair has turned as white as stripes on the American flag. However‚ for him to get his position it took more than having good makeup‚ white hair‚ and a nice suit. Being brought up in a wealthy family of lawyers‚ he was almost bred to be a politician
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This tale by Edgar Allan Poe is not only about revenge but betrayal. The narrator‚ otherwise known as Montresor‚ tells the reader the tale of him‚ 50 years before‚ getting revenge on an old friend named Fortunato who had done him wrong in some unknown way. Within this short story‚ Poe uses many examples of black humor and irony. Poe uses Fortunato’s name symbolically‚ as an ironic device. Though his name means “the fortunate one” in Italian‚ Fortunato meets an unfortunate fate as the victim of Montresor’s
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In the Canterbury Tales Prologue‚ there is a start of a pilgrimage with many types of people. The destination is to a place called Canterbury‚ and each pilgrim agrees to tell tales on the travel to help the time pass faster. Before the character tells their tales‚ Chaucer introduces them. Chaucer’s concept was to explain each character’s personalities through their physical appearances. Three characters Chaucer uses description of physical appearance to illustrate their characteristics are the knight
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There is something nettlesome about not being able to firmly pindown an interpretation of someone we just met. Particularly‚ Chaucer seemed to gain some perverse pleasure from keeping everyone but himself from knowing a definitive answer about his most complex character. Throughout the story‚ Chaucer’s motives constantly appear to shift depending on the particular interpretation of the reading; thus‚ causing headaches for anyone attempting to firmly pin down the author’s true intention. One of the
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In discussing Chaucer’s collection of stories called The Canterbury Tales‚ an interesting picture or illustration of the Medieval Christian Church is presented. At all levels of society‚ belief in a god or gods was not a matter of choice; it was a matter of fact. Atheism was an alien concept. Living in the middle ages‚ one would come into contact with the Church in a number of ways. First‚ there were the routine church services‚ held daily and attended at least once a week‚ and the special festivals
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both the “Miller’s Tale” and the “Man of the Law’s Tale” of Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales‚ focus on the lexicon and the word-formation processes utilised‚ and consider how far it is representative of its period. Introduction: Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales were written in Middle English during the 14th Century‚ the period after the loss of Old English inflexions and before the standardisation of spelling due to the introduction of the Caxton printing press. Chaucer wrote during the years
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Geoffrey Chaucer Geoffrey Chaucer is a English Poet and wrote the unfinished work‚ The Canterbury Tales. It is considered one of the greatest poetic works in English. Geoffrey Chaucer was born circa 1340 in London‚ England. In 1357 he became a public servant to Countess Elizabeth of Ulster. He continued to work as a public servant to the British court throughout his lifetime. The Canterbury Tales became his best known and most acclaimed work. He died October 25‚ 1400 of in London‚ England and was
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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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of Bath The Wife of Bath is acclaimed to be one of Chaucer’s most intriguing characters. She achieved much of her reputation from the depth of her area under discussion‚ luring curious minds into her story and the greater meaning of it all. Chaucer‚ even as a man‚ was successful in representing a relatively fair feminist view of the medieval female’s plight by employing humor‚ historical perspective‚ and individual expression. The text of the Wife of Bath’s Prologue is based in the medieval
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Irony used in Macbeth During a scary movie‚ the audience knows where the killer is hiding‚ but the characters are clueless. This always keeps the audience on the edge of their seat‚ because they know that the character is going to die. This is an example of dramatic irony. William Shakespeare in Macbeth uses dramatic irony‚ situational irony‚ and verbal irony. Irony is used to add suspense as well as keeping the reader involved‚ to deepen the reader’s understanding of the characters and to emphasize
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