Chaucer's Use Of Satire In The Canterbury Tales

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Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales is full of satire throughout each tale included. The prologue consists of one example after another of satire, while The Wife of Bath and the Miller’s Tale include their own examples. The first examples are in Chaucer’s General Prologue, when he is discussing each of the pilgrims he uses satire for just about every one of them. His satire, however, is not necessarily an attack on these people, but on the church. One of the most noticeable targets of his satire is the Friar. Chaucer goes on and on about how wonderful and noble of a man the Friar is, but then he starts to refer to him as a “beggar.” He refers to the friar as “a noble pillar to his Order”, but then goes on to say “Therefore instead of weeping and

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