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Comparing Canterbury Tales And The Thousand And One Nights

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Apart from both stories having framing devices; how do The Canterbury Tales and the Thousand and One Nights compare and differ from one another? In comparison; The Canterbury Tales and the Thousand and One Nights, both contain a selection of frame stories that are told over a certain period of time. The Thousand and One Nights and The Canterbury Tales are also poems and have a beginning and ending within which a series of tales are related. The Canterbury Tales and the Thousand and One Nights are both occupied with a task; so as a result, they tell stories to make time go by quickly. For example, in the Thousand and One Nights “the king’s loyal vizier, his daughter, Shahrazad, volunteers to marry the king. He tries to dissuade her, but Shahrazad …show more content…

It happened, in that season, on a day in Southwark, at the Tabard as I lay ready to start out on my pilgrimage to Canterbury, with true, devoted courage, at night, there came into that hostelry, fully nine-and-twenty in a company of sundry folks, as chance would have them fall in fellowship, and pilgrims were they all, who, toward Canterbury, wished to ride, the chambers and the stables were all wide, and we were put at ease with all the best. And shortly, when the sun went to its rest, I had so spoken with them, every one, that I was in their fellowship anon, and to rise early I gave them my vow, to make our way, as I will tell you now”( Puchner, Akbari, Denecke, and Fuchs …show more content…

1744). The general frame of The Canterbury Tales centered on a set of pilgrims such as the narrator (Chaucer), The Knight, The Wife of Bath, The Pardoner, The Miller, The Prioress, The Monk, The Friar, The Summoner, The Host, The Parson, The Squire, The Clerk, The Man of Law, The Manciple, The Merchant, The Shipman, The Physician, The Franklin, The Reeve, The Plowman, The Guildsman, The Cook, The Yeoman, The Second Nun, and lastly The Nun’s Priest. All twenty-six pilgrims set out on a journey to Canterbury to visit shrines as well as the relics of Saint Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. In addition, both stories are either told by an individual story teller or a group of characters like we see in The Canterbury Tales. For instance, unlike The Thousand and One Nights, “this has (for the most part) a single storyteller; The Canterbury Tales revels in the extraordinary range of possible tales and possible

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