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The Influence Of Beliefs In The Canterbury Tales

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“Barna surveyed 718 self-identified Christians from a variety of denominations to find what extent their actions and attitudes line up with Jesus’s. Researchers found only 1 in 7 Christians manages to hold Christ-like beliefs and also act in Christ-like ways” (Steffan). Chaucer depicts a group of twenty-nine diverse travelers on a pilgrimage to Canterbury to visit the grave of St. Thomas a’ Becket. Many of the religious figures from the tales fail to measure up to the actions and attitudes of Christ as well. It is ironic because their attitudes consist of helping people and honesty but their actions show a completely different image. In The Canterbury Tales, the Nun, the Monk, and the Pardoner are rich, which is ironic because they take a vow of poverty. Chaucer manifests the Nun’s true character through her actions and appearance. One way he shows her true character is through her clothing. The text reads, “She wore a coral trinket on her arm, a set of beads, the gaudies tricked in green”(l. 156-157). The Nun wore expensive jewelry and clothing which suggests she believes more in worldliness instead of poverty. She should not have money to afford her expensive clothing and jewelry because she took a vow of poverty. The vow of poverty dedicated her life to the church and she goes against the vow by being rich. Another way Chaucer shows the Nun’s true character is through her emotions. For example, “She used to weep if she but saw a mouse caught in a trap, if it were dead

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