Looks Can Be Deceiving
Oh So Quotable
Fresh Rhymes
Geoffrey’s Toolbox
Before the Journey
100

Has yellow, waxy hair; can sing well; carries around a jar of pig bones; has several 

rolled up pieces of paper in his bag.

Pardoner
100

He knew the taverns well in every town/And every innkeeper and barmaid 

too/Better than lepers, beggars and that crew,/For in so eminent a man as he/It was not 

fitting with the dignity/Of his position, dealing with a scum/Of wretched lepers; nothing good can come/Of dealings with the slum-and-gutter dwellers,/But only with the rich and victual-sellers.”

The Friar

100

As a Crusader, in many a battle he proved quite gallant/But in his service to God and chivalry is he most valiant.

 

The Knight

100

 When an author explicitly reveals or describes something about a character.

Direct Characterization

100

Who proposes the storytelling game?

The Host/Owner of the tavern

200

Face is covered in boils that can’t be cured; children are afraid of them; eats a lot of 

stinky foods; speaks in Latin when drunk (which he is often)

      

The Summoner

200

“I think there never was a better priest./He sought no pomp or glory in his dealings,/No scrupulosity had spiced his feelings./Christ and His Twelve Apostles and their lore/He taught, but followed it himself before.”

The Parson

200

This Pilgrim’s table manners are worthy of dining with the Queen of France/But if she engages her in conversation, she doesn’t stand a chance.


The Nun

200

When an author reveals details about a character subtly or through reasoning.

Indirect Characterization

200

The number of stories each pilgrim must tell.

4. two on the way there, two on the way back.

300

Gap-toothed and handsome; deaf and loud; a bit overweight; makes their own clothes


The Wife of Bath

300

 “And if he found some rascal with a maid/He would instruct him not to be afraid/In such a case of the Archdeacon’s curse/(Unless the rascal’s soul were in his purse)/For in his purse the punishment should be.”

The Summoner

300

He cares only about the politics of trade, looking like a man of status and rank/But there’s a secret he hides: he owes a great deal of money to the bank.

The Merchant

300

The art of expressing an opinion. Usually a critique, on issues or flaws in society.

Social Commentary

300

According to Chaucer, this is the month when people like to go on pilgrimages.

April

400

Curly hair; Strong and agile; served in the military; wore embroidered shirts

The Squire

400

“For he was Epicurus’ very son,/In whose opinion sensual delight/Was the one true felicity in sight./As noted as St. Julian was for bounty/He made his household free to all the County,/His bread, his ale were the finest of the fine/And no one had a better stock of wine.”

     

The Franklin

400

This Pilgrim means out with the old, in with the new/Never misses a chance to be with a woman or two.

The Squire

400

Direct or Indirect:  “To ride abroad had followed chivalry,/Truth, honor, generousness, and courtesy.”

Direct (Describing The Knight’s chivalrous personality)

400

The name of the martyr whose shrine the pilgrims are going to visit in Canterbury.

St. Thomas Becket

500

Educated and knew the gospels; poor but happy; lived by example; compared to a shepherd

The Parson

500

“He/She was so charitably solicitous/He/She used to weep if he/she but saw a mouse/Caught in a trap, if it were dead or bleeding./And he/she had little dogs she would be feeding/With roasted flesh, or milk, or fine white bread./And bitterly he/she wept if one were dead/Or someone took a stick and made it smart”

The Nun

500

Been on a couple pilgrimages on horse and in carriage/Moved up in status through the business of marriage.

The Wife of Bath

500

Identify the Indirect Characterization:

  1. There was a Merchant with a forking beard

  2. And motley dress,

  3. High on his horse he sat

  4. Upon his head a Flemish beaver hat

 3 What does it tell us?

500

The year The Canterbury Tales takes place (be within 50 years).

1387