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Geoffrey Chaucer
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Geoffrey Chaucer Often referred to as the father of English poetry;
Ordinary people spoke what was known as “Middle English”; however, literature, science, diplomacy, and religion were still in Latin and French; Chaucer composed his works in the vernacular – the everyday language spoken in London and the East Midlands; This made English poetry accessible to all.
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Life of Chaucer Born into middle-class family; father was a wine maker who amassed enough wealth to provide some formal education to Chaucer; Attached to several noble patrons; served as an ambassador to the king on occasion and received several pensions for his loyalty (ex. – he was granted a promise of a daily pitcher of wine);
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Writing and Holding a Job
While Chaucer held various government responsibilities, he still managed to create several allegorical poems (poems with symbolical representations) House of Fame, Parliament of Fowls, and Troilus and Criseyde
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The Italian Connection
His travels to Italy likely influenced his writing; Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio; Canterbury Tales and Decameron (Boccaccio) have similar framing devices (refers to the use of the same element of significance at both the beginning and end); Chaucer’s frame is a religious pilgrimage during which each traveler is to tell four stories, two going out and two returning
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Canterbury Tales Chaucer began writing during a period of unemployment; never completed all of the stories; Collection is considered one of the greatest works in the English language; Greatness comes from the strength of Chaucer’s spirit and personality; Optimist, serene, full of faith; Joy is still the effect of Chaucer’s poetry; To Chaucer, life was a magnificent affair.
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Canterbury Tales cont. Characters are on a pilgrimage; Twenty-nine characters are from many places and stages of life; They travel together on horseback from London to the shrine of the martyr Saint Thomas á Becket at Canterbury Cathedral; Trip is approx. 55 miles long, so they decide to tell tales along the way to pass the time;
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Canterbury Tales cont. This sets up his frame story (a story that includes any number of different narratives) - the main story of the pilgrimage that includes each pilgrim’s story; two tales on the way, two out; The pilgrims fall into the three major divisions of medieval society – the feudal order, the church, and the merchant/professional class; The characters represent “everyman” – or all of us, on our universal pilgrimage through life.
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