Is the climax of the Miller's Tale simply an example of bowdy humor or does it have a deeper message of Chaucer and his time.
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Is the climax of the Miller's Tale simply And example of bowdy humor or does It have a deeper message of Chaucer and his time? During the climax of the Miller's Tale, Chaucer incorporates a kind of bowdy humor that makes the whole tale seem as though it is a comedy that just entertains the reader as a kind of prelude for the rest of the Tales in the Cabterbury Tales it self. The whole ending to the reader may just seem an elaborate ending to a tale that seems to stem from a kind of perverted mind at the times of Chaucer. The setting of the time is very important as it shows that the old days in which Chaucer lived in was not all the stereotypical ideas that many hold today and have been exploited by film makers as well. The ending and the tale show that the...

