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The Significance Of The Pardoner In The Canterbury Tales

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The Significance Of The Pardoner In The Canterbury Tales
The Pardoner is portrayed in The Canterbury Tales as a royal and religious person. He was said to make monkeys of the priest and congregation with his lies and could tell a story like no other. But what he was best at over all were the songs he sang with his honey-tongue, able to win silver from the crowd while he sang merrily and loud. With him he carried a cross of metal set with stones and a glass of pig bones to astound any parson he came across.
The Pardoner was made to represent a part of a religious movement not approved and condemned false by the church. The Pardoner uses this movement to gain money from crowds of people.

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