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Why do you think Chaucer might have leavened with humor even the more serious and romantic of his tales (as in the squabbling gods of the Knight’s story)? How does humor seem to relate to Chaucer’s larger perspective on the world?
Chaucer left “The Cook’s Tale” unfinished. Write an ending for it based on the stories you’ve seen around it. What might become of Revelling [sic] Peterkin and his lowlife friends? What in the rest of The Canterbury Tales makes you think so?
Pick two adjacent tales in which the tellers seem to get on each other’s nerves (there are plenty to choose from!). How do these tales play off each other? What similar ideas are being addressed differently in each, and how do the poem’s themes evolve through different tellers?
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By Geoffrey Chaucer
British Literature
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Historical Fiction
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Marriage
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Medieval Literature / Middle Ages
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Novels & Books in Verse
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Pride Month Reads
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Required Reading Lists
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Satire
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Valentine's Day Reads: The Theme of Love
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