Saturday, April 18, 2020
The Canterbury Tales Essays - Fiction, Literature,
  The Canterbury Tales    The Canterbury Tales    Central Character: young Christian boy    Point of View: Told by the Prioress in    3rd person    Setting: Town in Asia    Summary of the Plot: A young Christian  boy 7 years old learns a new Christian hymn and sings it all of the time.    He walked through a Jewish ghetto to and from school singing it. Satan  tells the Jewish people that the boy was disgracing them and he should  be killed. So the Jewish people catch him and slit his throat. His mother  finds him dead, but still singing the hymn. The Jewish people are dragged  by horses and then killed. Later, he is silenced when the grain is removed  from his tongue.    Nature of Conflict: Jewish boys don't want  the Christian boy to sing anymore.    Tone: A sad story of hatred between different  religions.    Style: informative, easy to read, simple    Central events: A boy is killed by Jewish  boys, but continues to sing    Theme: The Jewish people are evil    Evaluation: A story about religions told  by a nun. It views the Jewish people are bad and the Christian people are  good. The tale shows the Prioress' feelings for Jewish people.    
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