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Chaucer's and Canterbury
* The yeoman in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is described as wearing a " baldrick of bright green.
In " The Miller's Tale " in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, a door is ripped off its hinges only to be slowly closed again in the next scene.
After a long list of works written earlier in his career, including Troilus and Criseyde, House of Fame, and Parliament of Fowls, the Canterbury Tales was Chaucer's magnum opus.
In " The Knight's Tale " in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, Emily prays to Diana to be spared from marriage to either Palamon or Arcite.
This novel deals with a space war, and is inspired in its structure by Boccaccio's Decameron and Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
It appears in several of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
More recently, thinkers have struggled to find a definition that could encompass formal differences as great as those between Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Matsuo Bashō's Oku no Hosomichi, as well as differences in context spanning Tanakh religious poetry, love poetry, and rap.
Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales recounts the tales told by pilgrims on their way to Canterbury and the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket.
Inns and taverns feature throughout English literature and poetry, from The Tabard Inn in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales onwards.
In Europe, the oral story-telling tradition began to develop into written stories in the early 14th century, most notably with Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron.
* In Geoffrey Chaucer's, ' The Canterbury Tales ', there are numerous references.
Around c. 1380 – 1400, the issue of feminine sovereignty was addressed in Geoffrey Chaucer's Middle English collection of Canterbury Tales, specifically in The Wife of Bath's Tale.
* Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales is set in a company of pilgrims on their way from Southwark to the shrine of St. Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral.
It occurs in countless variations from recipe collections from all over Europe and is mentioned in the prologue to Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and in an early 15th century cookbook written by the chefs of Richard II.
This story appears to have influenced later European tales such as Adenes Le Roi's Cleomades and " The Squire's Prologue and Tale " told in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales.
Themes and motifs with parallels in the Nights are found in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales ( in The Squire's Tale the hero travels on a flying brass horse ) and Boccaccio's Decameron.
Jack Zipes writes in When Dreams Came True, " There are fairy tale elements in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene, and ... in many of William Shakespeare plays ".
Becket's cult was then still thriving, as evidenced in the monastic accounts and in literary works such as Chaucer's ' Canterbury Tales ', and Henry seemed particularly devoted to it, or at least keen to be associated with it.
This pilgrimage provided the theme for Geoffrey Chaucer's 14th-century literary classic The Canterbury Tales.
This pilgrimage provided the framework for Geoffrey Chaucer's 14th-century collection of stories, The Canterbury Tales.
The area was renowned for its inns, especially The Tabard, from which Chaucer's pilgrims set off on their journey in The Canterbury Tales.
The film takes its title from Chaucer's " The Knight's Tale " in his Canterbury Tales, though the plot is not especially similar.

Chaucer's and Tales
The Canon's Yeoman's Prologue and Tale appears in Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
The income from pilgrims ( such as those portrayed in Geoffrey Chaucer's " Canterbury Tales ") who visited

Chaucer's and are
The two supporters on the coat of arms are an Elizabethan player dressed to play Hamlet to the left, indicating the theatrical heritage of the area, and the youth on the right side is the Esquire from Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
The reputation of Chaucer's successors in the 15th century has suffered in comparison with him, though Lydgate and Skelton are widely studied.
and Aphra Behn's, Oroonoko ( 1688 ) are also contenders, while earlier works such as Sir Thomas Malory's Morte d ' Arthur, and even the " Prologue " to Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales have been suggested.
Chaucer's " representatives of the three estates are moral and social exemplars ; the Knight, the Parson, and the Ploughman all strive but they do it selflessly rather than competitively ".
century Europe, and / or the dangers posed by lay heretics, although Geoffrey Chaucer's religious views are not obvious.
" The Wife of Bath's Tale " () and prologue are among the best-known of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
Chaucer's Canterbury Pilgrims c 1820-23. A franklin was a medieval landowner, and this pilgrim's words when interrupting the Squire are often seen as displaying his social status of diminutio.
: The central episode of the Merchant's Tale is like a fabliau, though of a very unusual sort: It is cast in the high style, and some of the scenes ( the marriage feast, for example ) are among Chaucer's most elaborate displays of rhetorical art.
Instead, they are summoned by Master Glimfeather to a Parliament of his fellow talking owls ( a pun on Chaucer's Parlement of Foules, but also a nod towards the use of the word " parliament " as a collective noun for owls ).
Sometimes these short narratives are collected into interrelated groups, as with Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
It is not clear whether these are sincere declarations of remorse on Chaucer's part, a continuation of the theme of penitence from the Parson's Tale or simply a way to advertise the rest of his works.
Chaucer's works are written with traces of the southern English or London accent of himself and his scribes, but he extracts comedy from imitating accents, a comedic device that is still popular today.
Although some scholars are reluctant to say that Chaucer ever read the Decameron, Chaucer's story is very close to one told in Day IX, Tale 6 of that set of Italian tales, in which two clerks lodge with a innkeeper for the night.
The story has several differences from Chaucer's in that the clerks do not plot against the innkeeper but are only there to get to his daughter.
Chaucer's astrological passages are particularly frequent and knowledge of astrological basics is often assumed through his work.
Geofrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales give an illuminating picture of many of the different people who made up medieval society, although these portraits are limited mainly to the middle classes.
Yet his seven-line ( or rime royale ) and eight-line stanzas, to which he limited himself, are perhaps more frequently reminiscent of Chaucer's rhythm than are those of Lydgate.
Among literary works that reference the verse are Chaucer's " Summoner's Tale ", Byron's Don Juan, Tennyson's Harold, Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, and G. K. Chesterton's " The Innocence of Father Brown.
There are three main categories of Middle English Literature: Religious, Courtly love, and Arthurian, though much of Geoffrey Chaucer's work stands outside these.
The reputation of Chaucer's successors in the 15th century has suffered in comparison with him, though Lydgate and Skelton are widely studied.

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