![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() This collection of specially-commissioned short critical essays is designed for A level students. This series aims to introduce students to a wide variety of critical opinion and to show students, by example, how to construct a good critical essay. Part 2 A practical guide to essay writing: how to plan an essay the "General Prologue" as prologue, Charles Moseley.boring virtue and interesting vice - the literary conflict between morality and vitality, Cedric Watts.ambiguous icons - Chaucer's Knight, Parsons and Plowman, Paul Oliver.Chaucer's art of portraiture - subject, author and reader, Claire Saunders.Chaucer's two "corages" - moral balance in the "General Prologue", Angus Alton.the shipman's knife, Mark Spencer Ellis.Chaucer's critique of the Church in the "General Prologue", Pat Pinsent.character and caricature in Chaucer's "General Prologue", John E.Cunningham.the poet as pilgrim - the narrator of the "General Prologue", Alan Gardiner.Part 1 Essays: "a compaignye of sondry folk" - the structure of Chaucer's "General Prologue", Paul Norgate.Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. ![]()
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