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Which statement would the monk from Chaucer's "The Monk's Tale" most likely agree with?

Which statement would the monk from Chaucer's "The Monk's Tale" most likely-example-1

2 Answers

1 vote

B. people who have good fortune should not expect it to last forever...

I hope it helps you

answered
User Nicola Di Lillo
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3 votes

Answer:

"The Monk's Tale" written by English poet Geoffrey Chaucer around 1387 is part of the collection of "Tales of Caunterbury", and in this series The Monk defines tragedy, and particularly "the collapse of power"; akin to when someone powerful falls down to misery, arguing that wealth in the world can be an illusion, i.e. when he says: "if fortune decides to flee, No man may stay her course or keep his hold".

Thereby The Monk would most likely agree with statement (B.)

Step-by-step explanation:

answered
User MBK
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8.8k points
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