preview

Analysis Of 'The Canterbury Tales' By Geoffrey Chaucer

Satisfactory Essays

The Canterbury Tales express traditional forms of society through a variety of character Geoffrey Chaucer has created. He reflects on both the riches and uncertainties of the world he belonged in. Within each character’s stories there is the complex narrative of virtues verses vices of Christianity. The morals told in each story are ambiguous and left for the reader to decipher. However, Chaucer ends his stories with “The Parson’s Tale” and his own personal retraction. Both express a different feel from the rest of the tales. The retraction leaves scholars unsure of Chaucer’s sincerity of his confession. Instead the retraction is another literary piece that the reader is left to interoperate by the reader. Chaucer was influenced but religion throughout his whole life during the 14th century and The Canterbury Tales were no different. They were a group of stories told by Christians travelling on a pilgrimage to help cleanse their souls. Each story developed into an unique confession for the speaker. The reader relieves these stories and the sins effectively. However, the final note, Chaucer’s Retraction takes a different tone than the rest of the story. The author breaks down the wall of a narrative to state “that Crist have mercy on me and foryive me my filtes” (Chaucer’s Retraction, 327). His sins pertaining to every work he has written including The Canterbury Tales. Although this sounds like a confession, it is not sincere but another literary device used to have the

Get Access