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    to "The Nun’s Priest’s Tale” Geoffrey Chaucer was a fourteenth-century author of little origin. There isn’t much information on Chaucer. Almost nothing is known about Chaucer’s personal life and even less is known about his education. However‚ there are multiple documents about his professional life. His most famous work is the “Canterbury Tales.” “The Nun’s Priest’s Tale” is part of “The Canterbury Tales”‚ a collection of story written by Chaucer. “The Nun’s Priest’s Tale is an example of a mock-heroic

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    Irony in Short Stories

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    The uses of irony can easily captivate or excite us. Many times in order to understand the morals or theme of a story you need to be able to recognise the irony. In the short stories‚ “Lamb to the Slaughter” by Roald Dahl‚ “The Gift of the Magi” by O Henry and “The Suit” by Can Themba various forms of irony are present. These forms of irony include: verbal‚ situational and dramatic irony. The first story “Lamb to the Slaughter” is about Mary Meloney‚ a devoted caring wife that ends up killing her

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    in The Canterbury Tales can be applied to the present society. The Wife of Bath‚ the Oxford Clerk‚ and the Pardoner present universal views that are depicted in society today. The moral and ethical views portrayed by the prologues and tales in The Canterbury Tales‚ by Geoffrey Chaucer‚ are still sometimes valid today. People covet sovereignty over their spouse; people desire loyalty above all; and people use religion as a mean of gaining wealth. Primarily‚ the “Wife of Bath’s Tale” reveals

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    Fate is full of irony‚ what you dish out will come back to you. This slogan has never rung truer than in the ironic tale of the Cask Of Amontillado. Presumably taking place in the Italian countryside this story follows the protagonist‚ Montresor‚ in his quest to reap revenge on the antagonist‚ Fortunato‚ for an insult in the past. Ultimately culminating in Fortunato being buried alive this story is a textbook example of revenge. Edgar Allen Poe’s dark tale revolves around themes of betrayal‚ pride

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    The Pardoner's Tale

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    greed‚ sloth‚ wrath‚ envy‚ or pride‚ that person is known to face eternal death. These were not the only sins practiced in “The Pardoner’s Tale”. “The Pardoner’s Tale” was written by Geoffrey Chaucer. The most common motif used throughout this poem is sin. This piece is about sin because of the use of the setting‚ characters‚ and symbolism. “The Pardoner’s Tale” takes place in Flanders which is located in Belgium. The beginning of the poem takes place in a tavern. A tavern is a place where people

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    In the celebrated works‚ "Canterbury Stories‚" Geoffrey Chaucer recounts twenty-nine blessed explorers that are "on the way" to Canterbury. In transit there‚ the band of sacred explorers engages each other with a progression of tall stories keeping in mind the end goal to abbreviate the excursion. Chaucer‚ (the host) presents the each of the sacred explorers with legitimate and totally depictions present them with their own particular identity. All through the (first or starting scene)‚ he finds

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    Canterbury Tales Compared to Dante’s Inferno This study will explore the themes of innocence and guilt in the "Hell" section from Dante’s Divine Comedy and Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. The study will focus on the uses each author makes of urban and more natural settings to convey messages about innocence and guilt. While both Dante and Chaucer make use of this motif in making their thematic points‚ a great difference exists between them. Chaucer’s primary purpose is to present a humorous and compassionate

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    Irony in"the Lottery"

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    Irony in “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” offers an almost classic study of irony of situation: the reader expects a celebration; she gets a stoning. Such a reversal is the work of careful planning by the author. The reader expects the lottery to be a celebration of some sort because Jackson describes the setting‚ details the activities of the townspeople‚ and refers to the lottery itself in terms that belie the outcome of the event. First‚ Jackson establishes a setting which suggests

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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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    Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World‚ both portray a dystopian society in the extreme end. A Dystopian society is a form of totalitarian dictatorship as its prototype‚ a society that puts its whole population continuously on trial‚ a society‚ that is‚ in disenfranchising and enslaving entire classes of its own citizens‚ a society that‚ by glorifying and justifying violence by law‚ preys upon itself. A Dystopian society is what we today would call dysfunctional.

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