Sunday, August 4, 2019
Chaucers Canterbury Tales - The Nun Prioress of the General Prologue :: General Prologue Essays
The Canterbury Talesà   - The Nun Prioress       In the reading "The Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer, there is a  detailed description about the nun Prioress in the "General Prologue". Chaucer  uses physical and spiritual relationships to show the characteristics of a  person. When we see the nun in relationship to other characters, for example the  Knight, Chaucer makes the reader see two types of people. On one hand, the nun  who gives much importance to minor things. On the other hand, the Knight who  gives much importance to things that really matter. To describe how the nun was  Chaucer writes with irony the description of the nun Prioress, everything that  Chaucer says about her means the opposite.      Chaucer describes a nun Prioress called Madame Eglantine. A nun should be  modest, had to have poverty, and pity. Chaucer describes the nun in the opposite  way to show us, how the nun Prioress had all the characteristics that a nun  should not have. She was a nun modest, well educated and with good manners. She  also had tender feelings, and a strong love for God and his creations. The  author connects the relationship between how she sang and with her nose. He is  sarcastic when relating her physical and spiritual beauty. "She sang the divine  service well, entuning it in her nose in a most seemly way." (122-123) She was a  well educated person, who reflects her manners in her language and with her  actions. "She spoke French well and properly" in this quote properly means with  good manners, not with slang words or with the popular language used in France.  "For the French of Paris was unknown to her."(124) All of these characteristics  show how the nun Prioress was focused on thi   ngs that should not be important for  a nun.      à       Among her minor things, the nun in the tale actions was cautious and  splendid. Her manners were unique, and practiced with perfection. "Her table  manners were admirable: she never let a morsel fall from her lips, nor wet her  fingers too deeply in the sauce; daintily she carried a morsel to her lips,  taking care that no drop should fall on her breast: she took much pleasure in  proper etiquette." (133) The author makes us understand that her behavior with  such perfection was not because she was obligated to act in this way.  					    
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