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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.
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The Prologue to The Canterbury TalesThe Knight The Squire The YeomanThe Prioress By Geoffrey Chaucer 1340?-1400 Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Narrator Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Narrator • Setting • Spring • Imagery • “April”(1) • “sweet showers”(1) • “sweet breath”(5) • “tender shoots”(7) • “young sun”(7) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Narrator • Pilgrimage Season • Purpose • Gain grace and salvation • Religious Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Narrator • The Pilgrimage • Traveled to Canterbury • See the “holy blissful martyr” (17) • Thomas Becket Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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 Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Knight Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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 Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Knight • Clothing Imagery • “not gaily dressed” (70) • “fustian tunic” (71) (coarse cloth of cotton and linen) • “smudges” (72) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Knight • Purpose of the Clothing Imagery • Demonstrates that the Knight is a humble and honorable man Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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 Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Squire Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Yeoman Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Yeoman • Purpose of the Diction • The Yeoman is similar to the Knight • Nicely clothed yet still very humble and loyal Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Nun (Prioress) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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 Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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 Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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 Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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? Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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? Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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) Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Nun (Prioress) • Simplicity of a nun, but yet a “seemly way” to her appearance Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Nun (Prioress) • Purpose of the Diction • More emphasis is place on the woman than the nun Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
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 Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales
The Nun (Prioress) • Our Reaction • We laugh at her, but find nothing fundamentally wrong with her Geschke/British Literature The Canterbury Tales