The Knights Tale Part I describes the characteristics of a lover, while also showing the importance of nature as well. To be a lover, a man must be a hero while the woman, not only a damsel but a delicate one at that. Describing how the two brothers went to jail, the Knights tale was constantly talking about the “great doings” this knight did, and how women simply flocked to him. When the brothers were in jail, they already acted like the lady belonged to them from simply just seeing her. Nature plays a big part in this description, for when they first saw this “fair” lady, she was going around the garden, picking flowers, and the Knight’s tale was relating these things in nature to said lady. Planets and paganism seem to play a role as well, there are plenty of instances where Venus and Gods are brought up. The role these insights play seem to help Chaucer describe the characters hypocrisy while on surface-level, the characters seem noble. Chaucer portrays Emily as an object that belongs to the men without her knowledge to show how courtly love truly was during his time. Even at the end, the jealousy the one brother is showing the other even though he is not free, but he could still see her, it's incredibly silly.
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White Teeth by Zadie Smith
“’Haven’t you ever wondered why he hasn’t snogged you?’ ‘Because I’m ugly. And fat. With an Afro.’ ‘No, fuckface, because you’re all he’s ...
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“’Haven’t you ever wondered why he hasn’t snogged you?’ ‘Because I’m ugly. And fat. With an Afro.’ ‘No, fuckface, because you’re all he’s ...
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"How many pictures of one nymph we view, All how unlike each other, all how true! Arcadia's countess, here, in ermined pride. Is...
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