"The Sins of Madame Eglentyne", and Other Essays on ChaucerUniversity of Delaware Press, 1995 - Počet stran: 201 While each essay can stand alone in that Rex has approached Madame Eglentyne and her tale with a number of different considerations in mind, together they contribute to our understanding of this Canterbury pilgrim in important ways. Scholars lament the fact that Chaucer refrains from stating opinions - that he seems to have no axes to grind, never chooses sides, and always defers to the authority of others. In the Prioress's Tale, however, Chaucer reveals more of his moral thought than in any of his other works, for in this tale he juxtaposes the theme of martyrdom and vengeance with Christ's crucifixion and the concept of charity. |
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Richard Rex. 3 Pastiche as Irony in the Prioress's Prologue and Tale The Prioress's prologue strikes many readers as a pure effusion of spirituality , although one twentieth - century religious thinks that " the last stanza , with its ...
Richard Rex. 3 Pastiche as Irony in the Prioress's Prologue and Tale The Prioress's prologue strikes many readers as a pure effusion of spirituality , although one twentieth - century religious thinks that " the last stanza , with its ...
Strana 37
... Prologue , is the extended em- phasis on diminutives both in the tale's prologue and in the tale . In the prologue the Prioress , with exaggerated humility , likens herself to a sucking babe ; in the tale she dwells on the clergeon's ...
... Prologue , is the extended em- phasis on diminutives both in the tale's prologue and in the tale . In the prologue the Prioress , with exaggerated humility , likens herself to a sucking babe ; in the tale she dwells on the clergeon's ...
Strana 41
... Prologue . " 25 I would modify this assertion only to add that pastiche also is intended in the Prioress's prologue and that the prologue plays a significant role in joining the satiric portrait of the Prioress begun in the General Prologue ...
... Prologue . " 25 I would modify this assertion only to add that pastiche also is intended in the Prioress's prologue and that the prologue plays a significant role in joining the satiric portrait of the Prioress begun in the General Prologue ...
Obsah
Chaucer and the Jews | 13 |
Chaucers Censured Ballads | 27 |
Pastiche as Irony in the Prioresss Prologue and Tale | 34 |
Autorská práva | |
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