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Geschke/British Literatur e The Canterbury Tales The Prologue to The Canterbury Tales The Knight The Squire The Yeoman The Prioress By Geoffrey Chaucer 1340?-1400

The Prologue to The Canterbury Tales The Knight The Squire The Yeoman The Prioress

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The Prologue to The Canterbury Tales The Knight The Squire The Yeoman The Prioress. By Geoffrey Chaucer 1340?-1400. The Narrator. The Narrator. Setting Spring Imagery “April”(1) “sweet showers”(1) “sweet breath”(5) “tender shoots”(7) “young sun”(7). The Narrator. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Prologue to The Canterbury Tales The Knight  The Squire          The Yeoman The Prioress

Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales

The Prologue to The Canterbury Tales

The Knight The Squire

The YeomanThe Prioress

ByGeoffrey Chaucer

1340?-1400

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Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales

The Narrator

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The Narrator• Setting

– Spring

• Imagery

» “April”(1)

» “sweet showers”(1)

» “sweet breath”(5)

» “tender shoots”(7)

» “young sun”(7)

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The Narrator

• Pilgrimage Season

–Purpose

• Gain grace and salvation

• Religious

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The Narrator

• The Pilgrimage

–Traveled to Canterbury

• See the “holy blissful martyr” (17)

–Thomas Becket

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The Narrator

• Introduction of events/characters

– The narrator stays at an inn where he meets twenty-nine people who are also on the same pilgrimage

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The Knight

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The Knight

• Characterization– Diction

» “most distinguished man” (43)» “chivalry” (45)» “Truth, honour, generousness and

courtesy” (46)» “noble graces” (50)» “He was of sovereign value” (63)

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The Knight

• Purpose of Diction

–To demonstrate to the reader the narrator’s opinion of the Knight

–The Knight is a respectable and honorable character

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The Knight

• Clothing Imagery

– “not gaily dressed” (70)

– “fustian tunic” (71) (coarse cloth of cotton and linen)

– “smudges” (72)

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The Knight

• Purpose of the Clothing Imagery

–Demonstrates that the Knight is a humble and honorable man

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The Knight

• Purpose of the Knight’s Pilgrimage– “Just home from service, he had joined our

ranks/ To do his pilgrimage and render thanks.” (73-74)

– Returns from the Crusades alive– Wants to go to Canterbury to give thanks

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The Squire

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The Squire

• Characterization– Diction

» “a fine young Squire” (75)» “A lover and cadet, a lad of fire” (76)» “With locks as curly as if they had

been pressed” (77)» “wonderful agility and strength” (80)» “He’d seen some service with the

cavalry” (81)

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The Squire– “And had done valiantly in little space/ Of time,

in hope to win his lady’s grace”(83-84)– “embroidered like a meadow bright” (85)– “And full of freshest flowers, red and white”

(86)– “Singing he was, or fluting all the day” (87)– “Short was his gown, the sleeves were long

and wide” (89)– “He could make songs and poems and recite”

(91)

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The Squire

• Although the Squire is the son of the Knight, he contrasts his father greatly– The Knight is humble, while the Squire

dresses to please– It seems the Knight’s focus is on the afterlife,

while the Squire’s focus is on earthly possessions (religious life versus a secular life)

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The Yeoman

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The Yeoman

• Characterization– Diction

» “at his side” (97)» “servant” (98)» “neatly sheathed” (101)» “arrows never drooped their feathers

low” (103)» “A medal of St. Christopher he wore”

(111)

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The Yeoman

• Purpose of the Diction

– The Yeoman is similar to the Knight

– Nicely clothed yet still very humble and loyal

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The Nun (Prioress)

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The Nun (Prioress)

• Characterization– Diction

• “And she spoke daintily in French, extremely,/ After the school of Stratford-atte-Bowe;/ French in the Paris style she did not know.” (122-124)– Tries to speak French, but does not

have the correct “Paris” accent

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The Nun (Prioress)

“At meat her manners were well taught withal;/ No morsel from her lips did she let fall,/ Nor dipped her fingers in the sauce too deep” (125-127)

• Refined table manners

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The Nun (Prioress)

“She certainly was very entertaining,/ Pleasant and friendly in her ways, and straining/ To counterfeit a courtly kind of grace,/ A stately bearing fitting to her place” (135-138)

» Counterfeit

» To imitate

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The Nun (Prioress)

– “She used to weep if she but saw a mouse/ Caught in a trap, if it were dead or bleeding.” (142-143)

» What would happen if the mouse was not in a trap?

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The Nun (Prioress)

– “And she had little dogs she would be feeding/ With roasted flesh, or milk, or fine white bread.” (144-145)

» Appropriate to serve the dogs such good food when people are hungry?

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The Nun (Prioress)

• “She was all sentiment and tender heart.Her veil was gathered in a seemly way, Her nose was elegant, her eyes glass-

grey;Her mouth was very small, but soft and

red,Her forehead, certainly, was fair of

spread,Almost a span across the brows, I own”

(148-153)

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The Nun (Prioress)

• Simplicity of a nun, but yet a “seemly way” to her appearance

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The Nun (Prioress)

• Purpose of the Diction

– More emphasis is place on the woman than the nun

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The Nun (Prioress)

– Chaucer satirizes her in a gentle way

» She tries to be courtly and elegant, even though she is supposed to be simple and plain

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The Nun (Prioress)

– Our Reaction

» We laugh at her, but find nothing fundamentally wrong with her