"Moral lessons in pardoners tale" Essays and Research Papers

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    | |Social Studies | |Lesson Plan | |For the Week of: February 25‚ 2013

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    Satire in Canterbury Tales

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    The aim of any true satirical work is to poke fun at a certain aspect of society‚ while also inspiring reform to that very same aspect in one way or another. In Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales‚ Chaucer satirizes the Medieval Church and those associated with the church. Medieval society was centered largely around the Church. Ideally‚ the people were expected to understand that earthly possessions were meaningless when compared to the prospect of closeness with God. Man was expected to work until he died

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    bringing this unfortunate reality to life in his narrative poem‚ The Canterbury Tales‚ when he describes many of the clergy members with more vices rather than virtues‚ such as the Pardoner‚ the Friar‚ and the Nun. Throughout his poem

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    Chapter 3 Discovering Self-Motivation Concept Choosing a meaningful purpose gives our lives a direction and creates inner motivation. Many students have not defined a personally meaningful purpose for being in college‚ let alone for being in a particular course. Unfocused‚ these students are more likely to drift from rather than to academic success. By offering them the opportunity to choose personally meaningful outcomes that they would like to achieve in college or in life‚ we assist students

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    Canterbury Tales

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    Chaucer begins The Nun’s Priest’s Tale by describing a simple widow and her two simple daughters. They own a barn where a magnificently handsome cock with a beautiful and accurate "cock-a-doodle-doo". Here‚ his seven wives also live; his favorite is the most beautiful Pertelote. He one day speaks to her about a dream. In this dream‚ a fox eats Chanticleer‚ the cock‚ and Chanticleer now worries that it may come true. Pertelote does not believe in this predestination and gives her argument. She

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    Irony in Canterbury Tales

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    speech in which the real meaning is concealed or contradicted by the words used. There are three tales that are fantastic demonstrations of irony. “The Wife of Bath’s Tale”‚ “The Pardoner’s Tale”‚ and “The Nun Priest’s Tale” are the three. While each one is different‚ each uses irony to teach its characters a lesson. “The Wife of Bath’s Tale” does not have as much irony in it as the other two tales do. The most major ironical difference is that of the nature of the knight’s crime. He begins so

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    The Pardoner's Tale

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    In Flanders once there was a company  Of youngsters haunting vice and ribaldry‚  Riot and gambling‚ stews and public-houses  Where each with harp‚ guitar‚ or lute carouses‚  Dancing and dicing day and night‚ and bold  To eat and drink far more than they can hold‚  Doing thereby the devil sacrifice  Within that devil’s temple of cursed vice‚  Abominable in superfluity‚  With oaths so damnable in blasphemy  That it’s a grisly thing to hear them swear.  Our dear Lord’s body they will rend

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    fairy tales

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    Kassidy Bizzotto July 1 2014 In the fairy tale Cinderella‚ there are many elements that contribute to the message of the tale. One element demonstrated in this tale it the good character. The good character‚ being Cinderella‚ is an example of kindness and she shows how being nice to even the nastiest people can get you far in life. Another element is magic and enchantment. This element shows how friendship can make even the worst situation a little bit better. Cinderella has an unloving family

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    Everyman‚ The Pardoner’s Tale‚ and Death The morality play Everyman and Chaucer’s The Pardoner’s Tale are examples of many works that used death as a subject. Each work‚ however‚ approached it in different ways. Everyman personified death and uses the character to educate the readers on the reasons why death comes to everyone. The Pardoner’s Tale used it as a symbol and a theme to support the Pardoner’s sermons about the sin of greed. Nevertheless‚ both works are clear in stressing the fact that

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    A Moral moral never land

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    In the article written by James Harold called“ A Moral Never- Never Land: Identifying with Tony Soprano” author questions to the moral effects of TV on human life. Harold’s main claim in this article is that TV shows like The Sopranos combines both sympathetic and repulsive elements of life and ultimately its good for to invite the viewers to think deeply about the nature of good and evil. Also the author questions that there is nothing wrong with loving characters such as Tony Soprano because this

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