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1、-作者xxxx-日期xxxxthe canterbury tales赏析全【精品文档】The Canterbury talesGeoffrey Chaucer Contributions Father of English poetry nChaucer, for the first time in English literature, presented to us a comprehensive realistic picture of the English society of his time and created a whole gallery of vivid charact
2、ers from all walks of life in his masterpiece The Canterbury Tales. nChaucer develops characterization to a higher artistic level, i.e. characters who are morally and socially typical but exquisitely individual and realistic in detail. nChaucer introduced from France the rhymed stanzas of various ty
3、pes to English poetry to replace the Old English alliterative verse. nChaucer used for the first time in English the rhymed couplet of iambic pentameter which is to be called later as the heroic couplet . nChaucer greatly increased the prestige of English as a literary language and extended the rang
4、e of its poetic vocabulary and meters. He is considered as a great master of the English language. Chaucers contributions to English language qChaucers language, now called Middle English, is vivid and exact. His verse is smooth. He introduced from France the rhymed stanzas of various types, especia
5、lly the rhymed couplet of iambic pentameter which was later called the “heroic couplet” to English poetry. Though drawing influence from French, Italian and Latin models, he is the first great poet who wrote in the English language. His production of so much excellent poetry was an important factor
6、in establishing English as the literary language of the country. The spoken English of the time consisted of several dialects, and Chaucer did much in making the dialect of London the standard for the modern English speech.The Canterbury Tales介绍nThe Canterbury Tales is a book of stories. This is an
7、important book, because it is one of the first to be written in the English language. The book is about a group of travelers who are going from London to Canterbury. As they travel along, each person tells a tale (a story). This is why the book is called The Canterbury Tales.nThe Canterbury Tales, b
8、egun in about 1386, consists of stories told by some of the thirty pilgrims who set off from the Tabard Inn in Southwark, London, to visit the shrine of St. Thomas a Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury murdered in his own cathedral in 1170. The aim was to tell four stories each: two on the way, two
9、 on the way back. The teller of the best story would be given a free dinner by the cheerful host of the Tabard. In fact, the collection is incomplete and only 24 stories are told. Two of the stories are written in prose and the others are written in verse. It opens with a general prologue where we a
10、re told of a company of pilgrims that gathered at Tabard Inn in Southwark, a suburb of London. They are on their way to the shrine of St. Thomas Becket at Canterbury. They set out together with the “jolly innkeeper,” Harry Baily, who becomes their “governor” and proposes that each pilgrim should tel
11、l two tales on the way to Canterbury and two more on the way back. The pilgrims being 31 in all the total number of tales, according to Chaucers plan, was to exceed that of Baccaccios Decameron. These pilgrims include a Knight, his son the Squire, the Knights Yeoman, a Prioress, a Second Nun, a Monk
12、, a Friar, a Merchant, a Clerk, a Man of Law, a Franklin, a Weaver, a Dyer, a Carpenter, a Tapestry-Maker, a Haberdasher, a Cook, a Shipman, a Physician, a Parson, a Miller, a Manciple, a Reeve, a Summoner, a Pardoner, the Wife of Bath, and Chaucer himself.ThemeInfluenced by the early Italian Renais
13、sance, Chaucer affirmed mans right to pursue earthly happiness and opposed asceticism, praised mans energy, intellect, and love of life. Meanwhile, he also exposed and satirized the social evils, esp. the religious abuses. Stylelively and vivid Middle-Age English nsatiric and humorous nheroic couple
14、t nof unequal merits Characterization- vivid portrayal of individualized characters of the society and of all professions and social strata except the highest and the lowest nshows respect for the two landed gentry, the plowman and the parson; nsatirized all the religious people except the parson; n
15、shows a growing sense of self-importance of the trades and towns people, reflecting the changing social status, esp. in towns and cities. General Prologue:nThe General Prologue is the key to The Canterbury tales that narrates about the gathering of a group of people in an inn that intend to go on a
16、pilgrimage to Canterbury (England) next morning. In the General Prologue, the narrator of The Canterbury Tales, who is one of the intended pilgrims, provides more or less accurate depictions of the members of the group and describes why and how The Canterbury Tales is told. If we trust the General P
17、rologue, Chaucer determined that each pilgrim should tell two tales on the way to Canterbury and two tales on the way back. The host of the inn offers to be and is appointed as judge of the tales as they are told and is supposed to determine the best hence winning tale. As mentioned before, The Cant
18、erbury Tales was never finished.nThe Prologue provides a framework for the tales. It contains a group of vivid sketches of typical medieval figures. All classes of the English feudal society, except the royalty and the poorest peasant, are represented by these thirty pilgrims. nEvery figure is drawn
19、 with the accuracy of a portrait. It is no exaggeration to say that the Prologue supplies a miniature of the English society of Chaucers time. Looking at his word-pictures, we know at once how people lived in that era. That is why Chaucer has been called “the founder of English realism.” Summary of
20、The General Prologue On April 17th toward the end of the fourteenth century nine and twenty pilgrims gather in the Tabard Inn in Southwark, just across the river from London, at the beginning of the road to Canterbury. Geoffrey Chaucer talks to each one and joins their company for a pilgrimage to Ca
21、nterbury to seek the blissful martyr, Thomas Becket. Harry Bailey, the host of the Tabard, decides to join them and act as their leader; each pilgrim will tell four stories - two each on the way there, two each on the way back. The pilgrim who tells the best tale - with the best sentence and most so
22、laas will have a dinner at the others cost when the company returns to the Tabard. The pilgrims agree and the next morning they set out, stopping at the Watering of St. Thomas, just out of town, where they reconfirm their decision and, at Harrys direction, draw straws to see who will tell the first
23、tale. Strangely, the lot fell to the knight and he tells the first story. Introduction to the pilgrimsnThe knight: perfect and gentle man who loved truth, freedom, chivalry and honor. The most socially prominent person on the journey; the battles he fought were all religious wars of some nature.nThe
24、 Squire: a candidate for knighthood; a lover who can sing lusty songs, compose melodies, poetrynYeoman: dressed in green; an expert woodsman, an excellent shot with the bow/ arrow.nPrioress: Madame Eglantine; a gentle lady; well-educated though her French wasnt accepted Parisian French. Coy and deli
25、cate; table manner; More a woman than a nun! Without vocation but with the dogs and jewelry that satirical literature always condemns nuns for. Associates of the Prioress: 3 priests and another nunPilgrims Image GalleryFour main qualities of the Knight. nThe first is the Knights love of ideals“chiva
26、lrie” (prowess), “trouthe” (fidelity), “honour” (reputation), “fredom” (generosity), and “curteisie” (refinement) (General Prologue, 4546). nThe second is the Knights impressive military career. The Knight has fought in the Crusades, wars in which Europeans traveled by sea to non-Christian lands and
27、 attempted to convert whole cultures by the force of their swords. nThe third quality the narrator remembers about the Knight is his meek, gentle, manner. nAnd the fourth is his “array,” or dress. The Knight wears a tunic made of coarse cloth, and his coat of mail is rust-stained, because he has rec
28、ently returned from an expedition. SignificancenThe Canterbury Tales is Chaucers Masterpiece and one of the monumental works in English literature. nIt is one of the landmarks of English literature, perhaps the greatest work produced in Middle English ngive us a true to life picture of his time. The
29、 work stands as a historical and sociological introduction to the life and times of the late Middle Ages ntaking from the stand of rising bourgeoisie, he affirms men and opposes the dogma of asceticism preached by the Church. nAs a forerunner of humanism, he praises mans energy, intellect, quick wit
30、 and love of life. nHis tales expose and satirize the evils of his time, attack degeneration of the noble, the heartless of the judge, the corruption of the Church and so on. nLiving in a transitional period, Chaucer is not entirely devoid of medieval prejudices. He is religious himself. There is no
31、thing revolutionary in his writing, though he lived in a period of peasant uprisings. nWhile praising mans right to earthly happiness, he sometimes likes to crack a rough joke and paint naturalistic pictures of sexual life. Chaucer has his weak points. But these are, however, of secondary importance
32、 compared with his achievement as a great poet and a story-teller.literary termsnheroic couplet: Iambic pentameter lines rhymed in pairs. It is called heroic because in England, esp. in the 18th century, it was much used for heroic (epic) poems. The heroic couplet became so important and fixed a for
33、m for various purposes that its influence dominated English verse for decades, until the romanticists dispelled the tradition in their demand for a new freedom. Poetics the heroic coupletcouplet: two consecutive lines of poetry that rhymean iambic pentameter: a poetic line consisting of five verse f
34、eet with each foot an iamb, that is a metrical foot consisting of one stressed syllable and one unstressed syllable as in dah-DUM, dah-DUM dah-DUM dah-DUM dah-DUM. an iambic pentameter couplet, e.g.At night there came into that hostelry iSome nine and twenty in a company iniamb: a poetic foot consis
35、ting of an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one. (e.g: alone; My heart is like a singing bird)npentameter: a line of verse containing five feet.nMeter: any regular pattern of rhythm or pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables.nFoot: a unit of meter.nRhyme: the repetition of sounds at
36、the ends of words is called rhyme. When words rhyme at the end of lines of poetry it is called end rhyme.-characteristicoffeaturesdescriptionintheprologue(序言)Theuniqueintroductionatthebeginning,aslongas860lines,isaframeofthewholebook,clarifyingauthorsdesignationandconception.Ithasacloserelationshipw
37、itheverylaterpartsofthebook,whilewecanalsoviewitasarespectivelydependentpoem.Herebywewillanalyzethecharacteristicoffeaturesdescriptionintheprologue.Theprologueisactuallyagalleryofallwalksofpeople.ChaucerwidelyselectedhismaterialsfromEnglishsocietyofthatage.Exceptthetopofroyalandthelowestslaves,wecan
38、nearlyfindtherepresentativesofallsocialclasses.Thoughreadingthebook,wecanhaveabetterunderstandingandbroadenoureyesightofEnglishsocietyin14thcentury,aswellasenjoythefeastofart.Theprologueisrichincontent.Thereistheknightwhohasparticipatedinnolessthanfifteenofthegreatcrusadesofhisera;thewifeofBathwhoha
39、sbeenmarriedfivetimesandwellpracticedintheartoflove;thepardonerwhoisassociatedwithshiftinessandgenderambiguity;justnameafew.Theybelongtodifferentpartsofthesociety,livingindifferentbackground,thushaddifferentlifestyles,habitsandcustom.Theycharted,joked,quarreled,andcompromised;theydiscussed,praised,c
40、riticized,andpersuaded.Theyadoptedtheirparticularwaytopresenttheirlifeexperience,providingavividseriesofnarrativeswhichdifferincontentandstyle.Thereisageneralnarrator,whoisfullofcuriosityandenthusiasm.Heisananonymous,navememberofthepilgrimage,whoisnotdescribed.Hesuggeststotellstoriesandthenorganized
41、themintothebook.Eachofthetales,however,narratedbydifferentpilgrims,istoldfromanomniscientthird-personpointofview,providingthereaderwiththethoughtsaswellasactionsofthecharacters.Therefore,thereisnosurprisetofindthatTheCanterburyTalesincorporatesanimpressiverangeofattitudestowardslifeandliterature.The
42、talesarebyturnssatirical,elevated,pious,earthy,bawdy,andcomical.ThenarratoropenstheGeneralProloguewithadescriptionofthereturnofspring.TheAprilrains,theburgeoningflowersandleaves,andthechirpingbirds;piercing,engendering,inspiringandpricking,allthoseareofspringsrenewalandrebirth,conjureupimagesofconce
43、ption:WhanthatAprillwithhisshouressooteThedroghteofMarchhathpercedtotherooteAndbathedeveryveyneinswichlicourOfwhichvertuengendredistheflour(GeneralPrologue,14)Followedbyisabriefintroductiontothebackgroundofthestory.“WhenthesweetshowersofAprilfallandshoot,/DownthroughthedroughtofMarchtopiercetheroot,
44、/Ithappenedinthatseasonthatoneday/InSouthwark,attheTabard,asIlay/Readytogoonpilgrimageandstart/ForCanterburyAtnighttherecameintothehostelry/Somenineandtwentyinacompany/Infellowship,andtheywerepilgrimsall/ThattowardsCanterburymeanttoride,”Afteralltheessentialelementsbeingpresented,thencomesthefeature
45、sdescription,themainpartintheprologue.Thenarratorspendsconsiderabletimecharacterizingthegroupmembersaccordingtotheirsocialpositions.Thepilgrimsrepresentadiversecrosssectionof14thcenturyEnglishsociety.Medievalsocialtheorydividedsocietyintothreebroadclasses,called“estates”:themilitary,theclergy,andthe
46、laity.IntheportraitsthatwewillseeintherestoftheGeneralPrologue,theknightandsquirerepresentthemilitaryestate.Theclergyisrepresentedbytheprioress,themonk,thefriar,andtheparson.Theothercharacters,fromthewealthyFranklintothepoorPlowman,arethemembersofthelaity.Theselaycharacterscanbefurthersubdividedintolandowners(theFranklin),professionals(theClerk,theManofLaw,theGuildsmen,thePhysician,andtheshipman),laborers(theCook,thePlowman),stewards(theMiller,the