Page 2 out of 16 results
Sort by
Newest The Canterbury Tales summaries
-
Essay The Canterbury Tales
- Essay • 1 pages • 2020
-
- £4.00
- + learn more
Essay on 'the setting' of the book 'The Canterbury Tales'
-
What role do magical objects play in Chaucer's 'The Squire's Tale' and 'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight'?
- Essay • 12 pages • 2020
-
- £45.49
- + learn more
For the purpose of this essay, I will discuss the magical objects of a brass horse, the ring, mirror and sword that appear in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Squire’s Tale and the celebrated magic girdle in the poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, before analytically considering in detail their individual roles within the text.
-
The Merchant's Tale Themes, Quotes and Analysis
- Study guide • 7 pages • 2019
- Available in package deal
-
- £7.49
- 10x sold
- + learn more
A very detailed document containing quotes and analysis from the text (including line numbers) along with relevant context and critical quotes under nine major themes that may come up in an exam. Makes essay writing a breeze!
Do you also write (revision) notes yourself? Put them up for sale and earn every time your document is purchased.
-
The Merchant's Tale Essay Plans
- Other • 3 pages • 2019
- Available in package deal
-
- £6.49
- 6x sold
- + learn more
Five full essay plans including context, critical quotes and quotes from the text with line numbers.
-
The Merchant's Tale Context
- Study guide • 3 pages • 2019
- Available in package deal
-
- £4.99
- 2x sold
- + learn more
This contains all the context needed for the Part Two essay on The Merchant's Tale! It's divided into eight categories with detailed bullet point information- it will save you a lot of hours on google!
-
ESSAY: Explore how the theme of control is presented in The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale, by referring to lines 312-335 and one other extract of similar length.
- Essay • 2 pages • 2019
-
- £5.49
- + learn more
Essay on Chaucer's 'the wife of bath' from the canterbury tales titled: Explore how the theme of control is presented in The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale, by referring to lines 312-335 and one other extract of similar length.
Study stress? For sellers on Stuvia, these are actually golden times. KA-CHING! Earn from your revision notes too and start uploading now. Discover all about earning on Stuvia