this is by introducing irony. Irony is an outcome of events that is contrary to what was expected. Many authors may use three different types of irony to get their point across. These types of irony are verbal‚ dramatic‚ or situational. They may apply irony to turn a story around and to give it a twist. One author who utilizes this technique is Geoffrey Chaucer in The Canterbury Tales. In fact‚ Chaucer enhances irony in his story “The Miller’s Tale.” He incorporates irony to entertain his readers
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Satire in The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer was one of the greatest English poets during the Middle Ages. He will forever be known as the leading author in English writing before the time of William Shakespeare. Chaucer wrote narrative poems in Middle English‚ the form of English used from about 1100 to about 1485. One of the keys to Chaucer’s continued critical success is the scope and diversity of his work. Readers of each century have discovered something new in Chaucer and have learned something
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Nathaniel Hawthorne use verbal irony to elaborate the text. Both short stories explain the verbal type of irony. Verbal irony is a situation in which a character says the opposite of what he or she means. Verbal irony is not always shown in the text directly. The reader most of the time has to continue reading until the end of the passage‚ to actually see if it was verbal irony instead of a different type of irony. In “Young Goodman Brown”‚ examples of verbal irony are the names of the characters
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In “The Tell-Tale Heart‚” irony occurs throughout the story. For example‚ irony occurs when the old man locks himself in his home to escape evil only to be killed by someone within. Poe states‚ “His room was as black as pitch with the thick darkness (for the shutters had been close fastened‚ through fear of robbers)…” (524). By looking at this quotation‚ we can see that the old man feared being robbed‚ so he placed shutters on all the doors to be safe and to keep thieves from stealing his gold and
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The Reeve’s Tale Simkin is a miller who lives in Trumpington near Cambridge and who steals wheat and meal brought to him for grinding. Simkin is also a bully and expert with knives. His wife is the portly daughter of the town clergyman (and therefore illegitimate‚ as Catholic priests do not marry). They have a twenty-year-old daughter Malyne and a six-month-old son. When Simkin overcharged for his latest work grinding corn for Soler Hall‚ a Cambridge University college also known as King’s Hall
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Tell-Tale Heart‚” the author‚ Edgar Allen Poe‚ uses irony to achieve and sustain suspense and horror for his readers. One example of irony(dramatic) is when the narrator repeatedly claims to be sane‚ but we become more and more certain that he is insane. “If you still think me mad‚ you will no longer when I describe to you the wise precautions I took for the concealment of the body...First of all‚ I dismembered the corpse. I cut off the head and the arms and the legs”(¶12). It is dramatic irony since
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through their similarities and differences. In the Canterbury tales the autthor makes sure that you know that there are alot more differences than there are similarities. For example the Wife of Bath and the Pardoner‚ they are very different stories but the author seems to tie in their similarities and differences. In the Wife of Bath and in the Pardoner there are many similariries and differences between the two tales. In the tales one of the similarities is that they both have experienced the
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I have chosen the Pardoner to expand on. In the prologue this character is described as having shoulder length‚ thin‚ yellow hair. He had bulging eyes and no facial hair. This might have been part of the reason that Chaucer judged him to be effeminate‚ describing him as “a gelding or a mare.” The pardoner is a member of the church‚ with the job of selling absolutions to the members of the church. This character could be a representation of one of the great controversies of the time regarding the
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Third eye wider than ya motherfuckin’ ego‚ amigo Hero‚ incognito tuxedo‚ boosten hoes overall libido Feeling euphoric like the beat a placebo Hot as jalapeno‚ Sick I need some chemo quick as torpedo‚ Cash the chips‚ Casino‚ Amino Acid‚ on acid‚ im tripping‚ an all these atoms im splitting im fittin Nuke‚ nauseous‚ fittin to puke‚ shoot‚ took a shot of absloute‚ whoo Fuck these bitches‚ man‚ fuck these hoes‚ Third eye soul‚ mind growth i suppose. I dont know‚ nobody does‚ no body loves
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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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