Answer:
In "The Prologue" of Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, the Chaucer's main reason for writing about the pilgrimage is to create a setting for telling stories by different characters.
Explanation:
The prologue of "Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer and Percy MacKaye starts with the welcoming of spring which provides as the season represents a vibrant, colorful, and full of life moment in time, where the characters appear and give the first traits of their personalities to develop the story later.
They all need to have their last names.
Performance
The entire prologue is written in sonnet form. It basically summarizes the entire plot of Romeo and Juliet. It tells the audience that a son and a daughter of feuding families will fall in love. Their parents' hatred for each other drives the teenagers to commit suicide so that they can be together. Then, the families will forgive each other and end the feud. The sonnet ends by telling the audience that this play will take 2 hours to perform and if you are patient, you will see how it is all carried out. The traffic is the coming and goings of the actors's performances on stage.