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Women In Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales

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Medieval Women Are Not What You Think They Are Women of the medieval times are not like women today, women in the medieval times were known to be cunning and manipulative. In the book “The Prologue” to Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, Chaucer gives us details about a Nun who is shown as manipulative and cunning and that it is also a trend for medieval women to be manipulative and cunning not only her. “The Prologue” is about how author Geoffrey Chaucer goes on a pilgrimage and takes note about the people that he views. On his pilgrimage there is a Nun who does things that nuns would not typically do such as wear red lipstick. Chaucer then continues to write about how she is not your typical nun and shows manipulative and cunning traits. In the story “Federigo 's Falcon” from The Decameron by …show more content…

“Federigo 's Falcon” is about how Monna Giovanna ignores a mans love and then manipulates him into getting something that she wants. These two stories are both showing that women of the medieval times were very manipulative and cunning . In “The Prologue” to Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, certain lines tell us that the nun in the story is manipulative and cunning. These traits are shown in line 128 “And she spoke daintily in French...” this might not be odd to speak French but speaking French was known to be the language of the upper class. This shows that the nun is trying to be cunning to other people by trying to get them to think that she is of the upper class. Also, in line 143 “To counterfeit a courtly kind of grace..” meaning that she had to try to fake her elegance and kindness. This is showing that she is manipulative because she is trying to get people to think that she has this certain gracefulness about her when she really does not have that at

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