Sunday, August 20, 2017
Introduction to Geoffrey Chaucer
Geoffrey Chaucer was a popular and admired poet during the Medieval England era. Chaucer is credited for creating iambic pentameter of sonnet, blank verse, and heroic couplet. He is also falsely credited for creating English literature overall. Chaucer was known as a Gothic artist because of his way of writing. He mixed things that opposed each other, such as naturalistic with symbolic and everyday with supernatural. His three sources for his poems was Latin, French, and Italian and he was well known for having mastered art poetical. Chaucer's work was often left unfinished and all of his stories had a naïve narrator which is why Chaucer's attitude toward his poems was often unknown. Each story had two characters with opposing lessons or opinions which created irony within the stories and left the readers with different conclusions of the stories. The Canterbury Tales is credited to be the most imaginative framed collection of stories ever created, though the collection was never finished. The structure of the tales creates the sense of unity with diversity. Each tale may have a different plot, however they all have a connection in some way or form. The collection overall is supposed to be a comedy, but there is tragedy and drama within it as well. Geoffrey Chaucer left a big impression on everyone because of his ability to merge teaching with entertainment, and open the minds of all his readers.
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