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Essay / Literary Essay: Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
One of the most recognized attributes of Chaucer's narrative was the ability to create characters who embodied characteristics removed from fiction, making them very real and believable through writing. To verify this statement, it is necessary to examine the work of Chaucer. The most famous of these is the collection of stories "The Canterbury Tales" (originally written in Middle English) which was Geoffrey Chaucer's last work and perhaps the best of the Middle Ages in England. Therefore, for literary reasons, three characters were analyzed in order to distinguish the level of transcendence recognized (if any) in their inner and outer lives. When we say that the characters created by Chaucer had traits far removed from fiction, this refers to the aspects that made them real, in other words, made them like us, ordinary people who commit sins, have values and virtues, have a regular job (or not) and have problems and don't always face them, or leave with grace. in the prologue to The Canterbury Tales, we saw hierarchical barriers broken down by joining representatives of various strata on pilgrimage. This is why The Cook, The Squire and The Manciple were chosen. The first character is The Cook, whose description begins with rather everyday language, but never quite approaches this informality. The physical experience of the cook is represented in grotesque detail; he suffered from a sore on his shin which was visible to everyone even when he was cooking. He also had a reputation for being dirty. And although he had a decent repertoire of dishes and cooking techniques, he was not very reliable in his work, as the dirt and flies flying around his kitchen made many of their guests poisoned by middle of paper . ....diplomat and official of the king collecting and inventorying metal waste) that Chaucer had led him to meet the “types” of people represented in his stories illustrating social classes in a certain way. He was able to shape the discourse and means of parodying the very people with whom his literature would become popular. His story was closer to the society with which they felt identified.Works Cited1. Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. Np: Blackmask Online, 1999. 89-90. Internet. December 7, 2013.2. Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. Np: Blackmask Online, 1999. 4. Web. December 7, 2013.3. “Geoffrey Chaucer.” 2013. Biography Channel website. December 8, 2013, 10:57.4. "Romanticism." Encyclopedia Britannica. Np, and Web. December 10. 2013. .