The ironic thing in the words used by the narrator to describe the summoner in "the prologue" to The Canterbury Tales is:
- <u>The Summoner was corrupt and was ready to forgive a transgression for a cup of wine</u>
According to the complete text, we can see that the Summoner is trying to convince a transgressor that he would allow him to keep a concubine if only he gave him a quart of wine.
As a result of this, we can see that the ironic thing is that the Summoner is supposed to be a church excommunicator who is sent by the Archdeacon to expunge people who committed offences against the doctrines of the church but he was willing to accept a bribe so that he would not do his job.
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The answer is C. It makes the poem sound more like a conversation between the poet and reader.
Answer:
Planning makes it easy to achieve the goals and objectives
Explanation:
List out all the objectives well in hand.
Make relevant plans
See that we stick to the plan
over view progress
Make corrections if required.
See the results.