60. Chaucer tells the tale in "The Canterbury Tales" in
(A) first-person point of view
(B) second-person point of view
(C) third-person point of view
(D) first-person and third-person point of view
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Chaucer
- Chaucer tells the tale in "The Canterbury Tales" first-person and third-person point of view.
- Chaucer's literary genius is found truly versatile. Chaucer's most original and truly English work is The Canterbury Tales, which is the product of his sufficient maturity as a story teller in verse. There are thirty pilgrims, who are to visit Canterbury. Those pilgrims are selected from different walks of life. There are the friar, the monk, the priest, the pardoner, the knight, the squire, the merchant,bthe miller, the wife of Bath and many others.
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Answer:
(D) first-person and third-person point of view
Explanation:
In the prologue the narrator speaks in the first person; however, each of the tales is told from an omniscient third-person point of view.
The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer is a book that has 24 stories in it. These stories have been written in verse.
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