Monday, September 2, 2019
Chaucers Irony - The Canterbury Tales Essay -- English Literature
Chaucer's Irony - The Canterbury Tales    Chaucer's Irony    Irony is a vitally important part of The Canterbury Tales, and  Chaucer's ingenious use of this literary device does a lot to provide  this book with the classic status it enjoys even today. Chaucer has  mastered the techniques required to skilfully put his points across  and subtle irony and satire is particularly effective in making a  point. The Canterbury Tales are well-known as an attack on the Church  and its rà ´le in fourteenth century society. With the ambiguity  introduced by the naà ¯ve and ignorant "Chaucer the pilgrim", the writer  is able to make ironic attacks on characters and what they represent  from a whole new angle. The differences in opinion of Chaucer the  pilgrim and Chaucer the writer are much more than nuances - the two  personas are very often diametrically opposed so as to cause effectual  irony.    In the Friar's portrait, he is delineated and depicted by riddles of  contradictory qualities. Chaucer expertly uses ironic naivetà © to  highlight the Friar's lack of moral guilt. When the reader is told  that the Friar, "knew the taverns wel in every toun" (l. 240), we can  take it to mean that he spends very much time drinking, flirting and  socialising in pubs. The Friar is superseded to be a holy man, but we  see that he knew the landlords and barmaids much better than the  people he has meant to be consoling, praying for and helping out of  the vicious circle of poverty. Chaucer the pilgrim explains how  impressive the Friar's generous charity is and has respect for the way  he marries off young girls with suitable husbands and pays for the  ceremony. However, he neglects to mention that the only reason the  Friar does this is because he has illegi...              ...Of course, Chaucer  the pilgrim simply sees this as being elegant and sophisticated.    Throughout The General Prologue we see how Chaucer the pilgrim has  been swayed and convinced by what the other pilgrims tell him. So much  so that he reports qualities that are often the opposite of the true  personalities of the characters he is describing. This ambiguity  reveals a very clever sort of irony on behalf of the writer - while  Chaucer the pilgrim is easily drawn in by their deliberate  misrepresentations, it is up to the readers to see how wrong he is and  draw their own, more accurate, conclusions. It shows many of the  pilgrims to be very different people than those symbolised by the  ideal qualities they want others to see. This astute technique is  particularly effective in pointing out the hypocrisy and corruption in  the Christian Church during Chaucer's time.                      
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