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Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales
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Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Dec 30, 2015

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Page 1: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Geoffrey Chaucer

The Canterbury Tales

Page 2: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Often called the Father of English poetry.

(1342-1400)

Since most literature and science was still written in Latin, Chaucer wrote his stories in Middle English (now Modern English). Until then, only ballads and the Gawain poems had been written in English because scholars felt the language lacked sophistication and had a limited vocabulary.

Page 3: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Since Chaucer worked as a government official under three different kings, his social status made him a popular poet.

He wrote in the vernacular or everyday language.

Page 4: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Chaucer’s Life

• Born to a middle class family.

• His father was a wine merchant who believed his child should have a formal education.

• He became a page to an important family and was so respected that when he was captured as a soldier during the Hundred Year’s war, a king paid his ransom.

Page 5: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Chaucer’s Writing

• Wrote a great deal for personal advancement The Book of the Duchess.

• Also created great allegorical poems, including House of Fame and the Parliament of Fowls.

Page 6: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

What is an allegory?

• A story in which the character, settings, and events stand for abstract or moral concepts.

• It has a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning.

• Popular in the Middle Ages.

Page 7: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Framing DeviceIn Italy, Chaucer met writer Giovanni

Boccaccio, and it is believed Chaucer got his inspiration for the Canterbury Tales from

Bocaccio’s Decameron.

Both use a framing device within the tales. Chaucer’s frame is a religious pilgrimage

during which each traveler is to tell two tales going and two tales upon his or her return.

Page 8: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Although the work was never completed, The Canterbury Tales is considered one of the greatest works in the English language.

Page 9: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Chaucer’s Style

• Prose

• Iambic pentameter

• Lack of alliteration

Page 10: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Chaucer was one of the first writers to be buried in the Poets’ Corner in Westminster Abbey.

Page 11: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

Please turn to page 98 and begin reading from The Canterbury Tales: The Prologue

You will then read ….

Page 12: Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales. Often called the Father of English poetry. (1342-1400) Since most literature and science was still written in Latin,

From “The Wife of Bath’s Tale” p. 137