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11Alexandr11 [23.1K]
2 years ago
6

Match the lines from Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales to the characters they describe.

English
2 answers:
Lady bird [3.3K]2 years ago
8 0

And honoured everywhere for worthiness; At Alexandria, he, when it was won - <em>Knight</em>. Knight is a siginificant character in the book. He has many qualities, but four of the them is emphasized in the book. He is worthy for this name because of the good qualities.  

Of courtliness, and stately manners took; And would be held worthy of reverence - <em>Prioress</em>. Prioress tries hard to seem courtly.

In wisps hung down such locks as he'd on head; But as to hood, for sport of it, he'd none  - <em>Pardoner</em>. Pardoner sells official church pardons and the lines is a reference to this act.

A lover and a lusty bachelor, With lock well curled, as if they'd laid in press - <em>Squire</em>. Squire is a young, handsome man as described in the lines who accompanies the Knight in his adventures.



d1i1m1o1n [39]2 years ago
7 0
The correct match of their characters are as follows.
And honoured everywhere for worthiness. this describes the <u>knight</u> due to honor.
At Alexandria, he, when it was won;Of courtliness, and stately manners took, this describes the <u>prior</u> 
And would be held worthy of reverence In wisps hung down such locks as he'd on head, this describes the <u>pardoner</u> because of his gentleness.
But as to hood, for sport of it, he'd none,A lover and a lusty bachelor, this describes the <u>squire</u> because of his dedication

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"How long will you continue like this?!"

"He doesn't deserve this!" "You can do better!" My mum would always argue with my Dad. I was years old. Very innocent. I knew only what my mum taught me and the little I learnt from school.  Sometimes when I got back from school, I would walk in on such arguments. My dad in the kitchen with my mum.

I had not yet been baptised into the world of adult complexities.  So I didn't understand.

So yes, I have a father, but I was raised by a single parent - my mum. Occasionally, my dad would totter in, hardly ever around. The scent of alcohol mixed with sweat and other hostile odour would accompany him as he walked past my mum at the door headed straight for the couch.

I was too young to understand anything and never really had many feelings for him.

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Three years later there was a call for enlistments. My dad being a nationalist enlisted with many of his friends. He promised my mom he'd be back.

He said to me in this revelatory conversation that the picture he had of mum, the perfumed handkerchief she gave to him and the thought of returning to her warm embrace was what kept him alive in the abyss of death. There were days he had to remain camouflaged in a position as he lay among corpses to escape the enemy.

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I went back home that day shattered and battered. That day, I saw another face underneath the face of my Angel.

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