a) Choose three of the four pilgrims you were assigned to read for this class (DO NOT CHOOSE PILGRIMS THAT WERE NOT ASSIGNED). For your essay, look at the General Prologue description of each of your chosen pilgyims, and discuss how each tale ‘suits’ its teller, using the general prologue description of each teller as as your point of reference. Remember that the General Prologue is at the beginning of the Canterbury Tales You read it first. and it contains Chaucer’s descriptions of most of the pilgrims. Don’t confuse the General Prologue with the prologues to each tale.
Some further help in explaining the prompt:
For your essay took at the General Prologue description of each of your chosen pilgrims.
Remember that there are different prologues you are responsible for reading. The General Prologue, which you are responsible for reading before any of the tales, Is different f rom the Wife of Bath’s Prologue totter tale, which occursjust before she tells her stocyot the rapist knIght.So if you choose the Wife of Bath apart of your answer to this prompt. you would go to the General Prologue and find the description of the Wife of Bath. Then you would go to the tate/twit
Discuss how each tale ‘suits’ its teller, using the general prologue description o feach teller as as your point of reference.
How does the Wife of Bath’s Tale about the rapist knight suit the description of her in the General Prologue? For each of your paragraphs (one on each pilgrim you have chosen). refer first to the General Prologue description of their character.and what that General Prologue description seems to indicate about their personality. If you were about to discuss the Wife of Bath, you would first situate that discussion within the General Prologue description of her, whkh begins on line 445 of the General Prologue. Then you would look to her tale. Follow this with discussions of your other two pilgrim choices.
b) The Miller and the Reeve have been cal led the ‘Jekyll and Hyde of the fabliaux. By this it is meant that the Miller and his talc arc more genial.affable and attuned to beauty. and the Reeve (and his tale) are meanspirited and ugly. Support this positionwithevidence from their prologues (NOT the General Prologue!) and their talcs.