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Tuesday, May 21, 2019

The Canterbury Tales

There are m any(prenominal) characters in the poem The Canterbury Tales, and some of them are more important than others. The mother superior, The wife of Bath, and the excuser are some of the most important characters. They have some similarities and some differences, though they all(a) have a blueprint in the story. The abbess is a bashful, sensitive, emotional woman. She overreacts over any small tragedy such as the death of a small animal. She is compassionate and proper. The Prioress wears a broach with the inscription All things are subject unto love.She is foolishly sentimental and pays harsh attention to manners. She struggles to be well mannered and sophisticated scarce it is all phony. Chaucer describes her as the image of absolute beauty and righteousness of the day. She is a gentlewoman with a simple and coy smile (91). Her nose was elegant, her eyes glass-gray, her oral fissure small, soft and red, and her forehead fair of spread (93). She likes to eat, and she w ill not let any morsel go untouched. She speaks French very well, has perfect table manners, and likes cosmos proper.The Prioress s behavior is scarcely nun-like, although it is not evil or exactly disobedient. She maintains some of the vainness of her pre-convent days, however this is because she is such a well-bred young women. The Wife of Bath is the most flamboyant of the travelers and she thinks very highly of herself. She was a plump, elaborate, jolly, bold, lusty, and voluptuous woman. She symbolizes Chaucer s grandmother. The Wife of Bath ahs been married five times and is looking for her bordering husband. She is a weaver and makes fine cloth.She wears bright red clothing of different variations, meant to catch the attention of others. The Wife of Bath is opinionated and energetic. She is the most notepricey of the travelers down(p) on the social scale. Chaucer indicates that she is quite promiscuous. The Wife of Bath shows off her body, mainly her legs. She displays he r Sunday clothes with immense pride and makes sure to announce herself conceitedly. She speaks of ten of the stop number hand a woman must maintain in marriage, and claims to know the remedies of love, or the rules of the game (100).The Wife of Bath appears to be a cut backling wife, who wants slide fastener but authority over all men. She is a very envious woman, who desires only a few simple things in life. The Wife of Bath desires the diaphanous in life, but what she most desires above all is being more powerful than her man, her spouse, and her lover. The forgiver is an audaciously dishonest man. He is extremely self-loathing yet hard-core to his task of swindling people of their money by making them believe that they have sinned and need to buy pardons.Chaucer compares him to a gelding or a mare (104). Chaucer makes it surpass that it is difficult to tell if the Pardoner is a man or a woman. He could not grow a beard, he did not wear a hat, and his hair was fairly long. H e is a hypocrite. He tells people they have sinned and need to purchase a pardon from him, while the whole time he is sinning. He is one of the worst and disrespectable of all the travelers. He was very graceful and in church he was a noble ecclesiast (104). He liked to blither and he would sometimes get tips for it so he sang a lot more.These cardinal characters do not act like they are judge to. The Prioress does not keep her vowels of the convent well, the Wife of Bath does not keep her commitment to her husbands, and the Pardoner does not keep his vowel to do justice. They are all self-centered and don t care about anyone else. The Wife of Bath and the Pardoner are worried about having money and being in control (power). The Wife of Bath and the Pardoner are evil and do wrong things. The Prioress and the Wife of Bath both want a man, though the Prioress isn t allowed to have one.The Prioress is quieter than the Wife of Bath and the Pardoner. She also is has not done bad thing s like the other two have. The Wife of Bath is more controlling than the other two because she wants to be in control of everything. The Pardoner tries to get money out of people by lying to them about their sins. Although these three characters have a lot in common, they have differences too. Though they are some of the lowest in society, they are some of the most important characters in this poem.The Canterbury TalesThis affect of creating characters who are unaware of how they are perceived by others is expertly shown in Chaucers Canterbury Tales. The narrator of the story establishes that he too is also a character. In his book, even though he calls himself Chaucer, the reader should be cautious to take his words as his own opinion. In the Prologue the narrator depicts himself as an amicable character, but then he is blamed to be sullen.Relying on his memory, the narrator describes his impressions of the other pilgrims based on whether or not he likes them, and what specifically he chooses to remember, or not to remember. This method is referred to as a unreliable narrator. In the case of the Pardoner Chaucers narrator is a very unreliable character. Proving this, the Pardoner sings Com hider, love, to me a ballad with which is accompanied by the Summoner, degrading his already questionable virtue of a man that works with the Church.Presenting himself as a man of ambiguous sexual nature, the Pardoner further challenges the social normalcy of the the Church. The Pardoner also takes with him on his journey to Canterbury the tools of his trade, which are objects that are used to deceive others in to thinking they are worth more than they appear, like the other pilgrims on the trip.The Pardoner finds out that special relics are valued on this pilgrimage, and he wishes to make a profit any way he can by selling materials to the other pilgrims whether it be pieces of paper with promises to forgive their sins or animal bones to ward off evil. Furthermore, the Pa rdoner preaches a sermon on greed that illustrates his own hypocrisy. The narrator is unable to see how the Pardoner deceives those around him, and fails to see who he really is thus screening the reader how the narrator of the story cannot always be trusted, but provides the reader with an interesting angle.

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