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Satire In The Canterbury Tales

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The Canterbury Tales is an anthology written by Geoffrey Chaucer, a master of satire and widely known as the father of English literature. The Canterbury Tales is about twenty-nine pilgrims and the host who meet at the Tabard Inn on their way to the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket; the archbishop of Canterbury who enters martyrdom upon death. The pilgrims visit the shrine in order to pay their respects to the martyr and heal their illnesses; Saint Thomas is known for curing ailments. They decide to travel together to Canterbury and tell tales throughout the journey to entertain each other. Each pilgrim is supposed to tell two tales along the way and two more on the way home. The host, Harry Baily (Geoffrey Chaucer) makes a wager that whoever tells the best story by the end of the voyage gets their meal paid for by the rest of the company.When Chaucer describes these pilgrims, he uses satire; the use of irony to expose someone or something. Three of the pilgrims whom Chaucer satirizes include the Prioress, the Monk, and the Friar; all of whom are all part of the clergy. He uses these characters to call for a change in his society with the use of satire to display the faults of the characters and how these faults have a negative impact on society. Chaucer believes that the Prioress is too selfish, the Monk is too obsessive of his worldly possessions, and that the Friar displays fraudulent behavior. The Canterbury Tales explores different relationships between three distinct

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