Bladian
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Sun Sep-25-11 03:46 PM
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Has anyone read "The Boke of the Duchess" by Chaucer? |
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Trying to write a paper on it for my Canterbury Tales class, and I was wondering if anyone could throw out some adjectives to describe the narrator. I've got him down as obtuse and dull, and I was hoping some of you guys had others. IF anyone has actually read the poem, of course.
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Chan790
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Sun Sep-25-11 07:18 PM
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1. I'd dispute both "dull" and "obtuse"... |
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Edited on Sun Sep-25-11 07:19 PM by Chan790
he is however extremely literal in his interpretation of the tale of woe and lost love of the black knight.
It could be viewed as either an ironic trait or Chauncer's sidewards jab at his profession as poets are by nature and necessity figurative and abstract in worldview; making this one a literalist who is not quick on the uptake recasts him as poet/fool...he's clearly the foil of his own narrative; the knight is more in line with the traits one ascribes to poets than the poet is. The poet's literalism highlights that.
Is Chauncer saying one must be a fool to be a poet? Maybe...He is always a wiseass, thought it gets lost in stuffy translations and a difficult English.
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Tue May 14th 2024, 08:43 AM
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