Chaucer Knight Tale Essay

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    Wife of Bath vs. The Pardoner A tale of rape or a tale of theft; which can provide the better moral? Written by Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales tells of a group of very different pilgrims on their trip to Canterbury, along the way they must tell their stories containing the most morale. Whoever tells the most noble story wins the prize of a free dinner at a tavern. After an extensive evaluation of the two tales, “The Wife of Bath’s Tale” and “The Pardoner’s Tale” the story containing better morals

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    In The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer introduced and described a variety of fictional characters that lived in the Middle Ages. It was the time period that European civilians were governed by a system called feudalism. Where kings were the head of the system and everyone was categorized in social classes. In the prologue of The Canterbury Tales the first character introduced was the knight. Geoffrey Chaucer depicts the knight correctly by characterizing him as a chivalrous and honorable man,

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    Chaucer's Canterbury Tales

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    age of knights in shining amour and the great kings in stone castles. Yet, it was also a chaotic time, War and plague was a disease upon Europe. Countries fought for land, resources, and above all, the attention of God. The world was young and so was the English Language. Few writers wrote in English, the language of the commoners, as French and Latin was the Language of the powerful élite. Yet one writer dared to speak against the feudal society of which he was born into. Geoffrey Chaucer served

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    The Canterbury tales are a series of poem illustrating the stories of different pilgrims on their way to their pilgrimage to Canterbury. The tales are recorded by Chaucer, a person on the journey, who tells the traveler’s story through poetry. The tale of The Wife of Bath is a tale told by a woman who explains in her prologue how she has been married five times and what she was seeking in each of her relationships. In her tale, of the knight seeking what women seek most dearly, the wife of Bath keeps

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    Mixed Feminine Message in Wife of Bath's Tale by Geoffrey Chaucer In the Wife of Bath’s Tale by Geoffrey Chaucer, various women, such as the Queen and the old hag, stake their claim to authority over men. Yet, they do so in a very covert manner. The knight has clearly abused his male power. He is a rapist. With the help of women, however, he is rehabilitated and seems to achieve the ultimate happiness. When these women support the feminist viewpoint that women should have mastery over their

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    The Canterbury Tales is a written work, by Geoffrey Chaucer, that is a representation of the society he lived in. His work portrays the feudal system during the medieval times and how each level of livelihood was a character, whose personalities reflect how Chaucer and his culture view them. During his time, his society regarded the Christian Church as corrupt and manipulative, with a few clergy who are honest and genuine in their exertion. Therefore, the ecclesiastical persona has the dispositions

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    Chivalry Code

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    However, Chaucer not only recognized pride within the hierarchies of the common man, but also recognized the immorality of the knighthood. Knights were usually born into their class and raised to serve their lords, thus decorating them with a sense of nobility and pride (McLean and Signman 18). Because of their role of protection, knights were commanded to adhere to a code of conduct. According to the book, What Life Was Like In the Age of Chivalry, this code of conduct was constructed by the king

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    Throughout The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer satirizes the chivalric code, in particular courtly love, in order to ridicule the knights in the noble social estates during his time. He utilizes the literary genre of a fable, which contains a moral lesson personified through animals, in “The Nun’s Priest’s Tale” to mock society's dignified views of courtly love. Chaucer illustrates the ridiculousness of courtly love when he notes,“This gentle cock was master in some measure / Of seven hens, all

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    The Canterbury Tales The Canterbury Tales was written by Geoffrey Chaucer in 1392, during the medieval period in Europe. Three important aspects, his family’s ties to the court, his schooling and working for royalty (XI), and his love for reading and learning (XII) all combined and enabled him to create his greatest work, The Canterbury Tales. Chaucer includes many different characters, pilgrims, all from very unique walks of life. Although there are not as many women included as men, their stories

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    Chaucer—perhaps uses the women who had power in King Arthur’s court to emphasize the effects of power, the lack of it and how that is faulty is his society. After being judged by King Arthur and was to be punished by a sentence to death, the Knight receives grace from a woman. When the knight was to be sentenced to have a beheading, the queen shows him mercy by reconciling with her husband King Arthur. The queen, upon approval from the King, gives the Knight a quest which was to find out “What thyng

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