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In the "Nun's Priest's Tale",


In the "Nun's Priest's Pertolete and Chanticleer have a very serious discussion about dreams and the meaning of them. The arguments of Chanticleer are imaginative as he believes that the bad dream he had is a prophesy, and all the stories he heard before were a preparation to made him ready to acknowledge this. Pertolete, on the contrary, has a more racional argument, he thinks that Chanticleer's bad dream is a product to overeating.

In the "Nun's Priest's Pertolete and Chanticleer have a very serious discussion about dreams and the meaning of them. The arguments of Chanticleer are imaginative as he believes that the bad dream he had is a prophesy, and all the stories he heard before, were a preparation to made him ready to acknowledge this. Pertolete, on the contrary, has a more racional argument, he thinks that Chanticleer's bad dream is a product of overeating.