Canterbury Tales - The Knight
Date Submitted: 06/23/2004 03:30:50
Canterbury Tales - The Knight
Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, written in approximately
1385, is a collection of twenty-four stories ostensibly told by
various people who are going on a religious pilgrimage to Canterbury
Cathedral from London, England. Prior to the actual tales, however,
Chaucer offers the reader a glimpse of fourteenth century life by way
of what he refers to as a General Prologue. In this prologue, Chaucer
introduces all of the characters who are involved
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such as the knight existed even in the fourteenth
century. As he does with all of his characters, Chaucer is producing a
stereotype in creating the knight. As noted above, Chaucer, in
describing the knight, is describing a chivalric ideal. The history of
the Middle Ages demonstrates that this ideal rarely was manifested in
actual conduct. Nevertheless, in his description of the knight,
Chaucer shows the reader the possibility of the chivalric way of life.
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