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One of the canterbury pilgrims crossword
One of the canterbury pilgrims crossword








one of the canterbury pilgrims crossword

One of the canterbury pilgrims crossword full#

He never speaks a word more than is needed, and that is short, quick and full of sentence (the Middle-English word for 'meaningfulness' is a close relation of 'sententiousness'). He only has a little gold, which he tends to spend on books and learning, and takes huge care and attention of his studies. A student of Oxford university, he would rather have twenty books by Aristotle than rich clothes or musical instruments, and thus is dressed in a threadbare short coat. But, the narrator ominously remarks, 'I noot how men hym calle' (I don't know how men call him, or think of him). He gives his opinion very solemnly, and does excellent business as a merchant, never being in any debt. The Merchant wears a forked beard, motley clothes and sat high upon his horse.

one of the canterbury pilgrims crossword

He hears confession and gives absolution, and is an excellent beggar, able to earn himself a farthing wherever he went. He is extremely well beloved of franklins (landowners) and worthy women all over the town. The Friar who follows him is also wanton and merry, and he is a 'lymytour' by trade (a friar licensed to beg in certain districts).

one of the canterbury pilgrims crossword

The Monk is well-fed, fat, and his eyes are bright, gleaming like a furnace in his head. This is no bookish monk, studying in a cloister, but a man who keeps greyhounds to hunt the hare. The Monk is next, an extremely fine and handsome man who loves to hunt, and who follows modern customs rather than old traditions. The Prioress brings with her her 'chapeleyne' (secretary), the Second Nun. She wears a brooch with the inscription 'Amor vincit omnia' ('Love conquers all'). She is so charitable and piteous, that she would weep if she saw a mouse caught in a trap, and she has two small dogs with her. She could sweetly sing religious services, speaks fluent French and has excellent table manners. Having now introduced the Knight (the highest ranking pilgrim socially), the narrator now moves on to the clergy, beginning with The Prioress, called 'Madame Eglantine' (or, in modern parlance, Mrs. The Yeoman is excellent at caring for arrows, and travels armed with a huge amount of weaponry: arrows, a bracer (arm guard), a sword, a buckler, and a dagger as sharp as a spear. The Yeoman (a freeborn servant) also travels along with the Knight's entourage, and is clad in coat and hood of green. He is the only pilgrim (other than, of course, Chaucer himself) who explicitly has literary ambitions: he 'koude songes make and wel endite' (line 95). The Squire cuts a rather effeminate figure, his clothes embroidered with red and white flowers, and he is constantly singing or playing the flute. The Knight brings with him his son, The Squire, a lover and a lusty bachelor, only twenty years old. The Knight is dressed in a 'fustian' tunic, made of coarse cloth, which is stained by the rust from his coat of chainmail. Everywhere he went, the narrator tells us, he had a 'sovereyn prys' (which could mean either an 'outstanding reputation', or a price on his head for the fighting he has done).

one of the canterbury pilgrims crossword

The Knight has fought in the Crusades in numerous countries, and always been honored for his worthiness and courtesy. The Knight is described first, as befits a 'worthy man' of high status. He describes each one in turn, starting with the highest status individuals. Yet before the narrator goes any further in the tale, he describes the circumstances and the social rank of each pilgrim. After talking to them, he agrees to join them on their pilgrimage. The narrator (a constructed version of Chaucer himself) is first discovered staying at the Tabard Inn in Southwark (in London), when a company of twenty-nine people descend on the inn, preparing to go on a pilgrimage to Canterbury. "When April comes with his sweet, fragrant showers, which pierce the dry ground of March, and bathe every root of every plant in sweet liquid, then people desire to go on pilgrimages." Thus begins the famous opening to The Canterbury Tales.










One of the canterbury pilgrims crossword