The Canterbury Tales
What is important about the tales themselves?
General Prologue and Chaucer's Retraction
General Prologue and Chaucer's Retraction
The tales themselves (except for large passages of the prologues and epilogues) are largely told in the words of the tellers: as our narrator himself insists in the passage. The words stand for themselves: and we interpret them as if they come from the pilgrims' mouths. What this does - and this is a key thought for interpreting the tales as a whole - is to apparently strip them of writerly license, blurring the line between Chaucer and his characters
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