For Chaucer's time, he took his uncivilized wild thinking to the extreme. Chaucer mainly wrote in a uniform rhyming end scheme couplet. For a master-mind writer like Chaucer, it was daring for him to write about many things that the church frowned upon, because during his time, the church was the main power. This may have caused Chaucer to gain as much popularity as he did because it was the wild and free thinking that Henry David Thoreau believes attracts readers. Chaucer uses end rhyme scheme, wild and free penmanship, and references to the bible, which most likely led to the praise of his pen. Firstly, Chaucer's use of end rhyme scheme sets him apart from most all writers of the present and past. He wrote 24 tales using the technique, which is very impressive considering the vocabulary a man would need to have in order to rhyme twenty four tales, with intentions of writing 120. What makes this more impressive is that Chaucer was a working man, not just through his writing, but he actually held employment and used his writing as a side job he was passionate about. For a man of his time, he had an immensely large vocabulary, considering spelling was a thing of the future, so it is known that Chaucer valued education, and most likely spent much time reading …show more content…
Chaucer's work as a whole has numerous references to the bible while twisting its stories in sickening ways, proving that he was standing against the church in a time where the church ruled. Using characters such as Adam, Lucifer, and reference to The Garden of Eden as Damascus. Referring to The Garden of Eden as Damascus was a small slap in the church's face because he believes that The holiest city (Damascus) is in Syria, while the church believes that the holiest city is