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Geoffrey Chaucer's "Tales of Marriage"
This paper discusses three of Chaucer's tales, "The Wife of Bath," "The Merchant's Tale," and "The Franklin's Tale," to determine Chaucer's views on marriage, arguing that "The Franklin's Tale" suggests Chaucer's idea of an ideal marriage. -- 4,925 words; APA

"Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer
A look at the general prologue of Geoffrey Chaucer's " Canterbury Tales". -- 1,219 words; MLA

Chaucer's Poetry
Discusses three poems by Geoffrey Chaucer. -- 1,125 words;

Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales"
This paper analyzes the character of the Parson in Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales". -- 1,150 words;

Chaucer and Pity
How Chaucer defines pity in the "Canterbury Tales", or an attempt to explicate the line " Pitee renneth soone in gentil herte." -- 2,785 words; MLA

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CHAUCER

The Canterbury Tales
By far Chaucer's most popular work, although he might have preferred to have been
remembered by Troilus and Criseyde, the Canterbury Tales was unfinished at his death. No
less than fifty-six surviving manuscripts contain, or once contained, the full text. More
than twenty others contain some parts or an individual tale. 
The work begins with a General Prologue in which the narrator arrives at the Tabard Inn
in Southwark, and meets other pilgrims there, whom he describes. In the second part of
the General Prologue the inn-keeper proposes that each of the pilgrims tell stories along
the road to Canterbury, two each on the way there, two more on the return journey, and
that the best story earn the winner a free supper. 
Since there are some thirty pilgrims, this would have given a collection of well over a
hundred tales, but in fact there are only twenty-four tales, and some of these are
incomplete. Between tales, and at times even during a tale, the pilgrimage framework is
introduced with some kind of exchange, often acrimonious, between pilgrims. In a number
of cases, there is a longer Prologue before a tale begins, the Wife of Bath's Prologue
and the Pardoner's Prologue being the most remarkable examples of this.
At Chaucer's death, the various sections of the Canterbury Tales that he was preparing
had not been brought together in a linked whole. His friends seem to have tried as best
they could to prepare a coherent edition of what was there, adding some more linkages
when they thought it necessary. The resulting manuscripts therefore offer slight
differences in the order of tales, and in some of the framework links. The tales are
usually found in linked groups known as 'Fragments'. The customary grouping and ordering
of the tales is as follows (the commonly accepted abbreviation for each Tale is noted in
parentheses):
Fragment I (A)
A?A?A?General Prologue (GP), Knight (KnT), Miller (MilT), Reeve (RvT), Cook (CkT).
Fragment II (B1)
A?A?A?Man of Law (MLT)
Fragment III (D)
A?A?A?Wife of Bath (WBT), Friar (FrT), Summoner (SumT).
Fragment IV (E)
A?A?A?Clerk (ClT), Merchant (MerT).
Fragment V (F)
A?A?A?Squire (SqT), Franklin (FranT).
Fragment VI (C)
A?A?A?Physician (PhyT), Pardoner (PardT).
Fragment VII (B2)
A?A?A?Shipman (ShipT), Prioress (PrT), Chaucer: Sir Thopas (Thop), Melibee (Mel), Monk
(MkT), Nun's Priest (NPT).
Fragment VIII (G)
A?A?A?Second Nun SNT), Canon's Yeoman (CYT).
Fragment IX (H)
A?A?A?Manciple (MancT).
Fragment X (I)
A?A?A?Parson (ParsT).
There is great variety in different manuscripts but I and II, VI and VII, IX and X are
almost always found in that order while the tales in IV and V are often spread around
separately.
Modern editions are usually based on one of two manuscripts, both written by the same
scribe: the Hengwrt Manuscript and the Ellesmere Manuscript. The former, in the National
Library of Wales, is the oldest of all, probably copied directly from Chaucer's own
disordered papers, but it lacks the Canon's Yeoman's Tale and the final pages have been
lost. The latter, now preserved in California, is more complete, and beautifully produced
with illustrations of the different pilgrims beside their Tales, but it shows the work of
an editor who has removed some of the roughness from Chaucer's lines.
Chaucer offers in the Tales a great variety of literary forms, narratives of different
kinds as well as other texts. The pilgrimage framework enriches each tale by setting it
in relationship with others, but it would be a mistake to identify the narratorial voice
of each tale too strongly with the individual pilgrim who is supposed to be telling it.
After the General Prologue, the Tales follow. The following is a brief outline of the
different tales in the order found in the Riverside Chaucer, the standard edition.
Fragment I
The work begins with a General Prologue in which the narrator (Chaucer?) arrives at the
Tabard Inn in Southwark to set out on a pilgrimage to the shrine of St Thomas Becket at
Canterbury, and meets other pilgrims there, whom he describes. In the second part of the
General Prologue the inn-keeper proposes that each of the pilgrims tell stories along the
road to Canterbury, two each on the way there, two more on the return journey, and that
the best story earn the winner a free supper. 
The Knight's Tale: a romance, a condensed version of Boccaccio's Teseida, set in ancient
Athens. It tells of the love of two cousins, Palamon and Arcite, for the beautiful
Emelye; the climax is a mock-battle, a tournament, the winner of which will win her; the
gods Mars and Venus have both promised success to one of them. Arcite (servant of Mars)
wins, but he dies of wounds after his horse has been frightened by a fury, and in the end
Palamon (servant of Venus) marries Emelye. The tale explores the themes of determinism
and freedom in ways reminiscent of the use of Boethius for the same purpose in Troilus
and Criseyde.
The Miller's Prologue and Tale: a fabliau (coarse comic tale), about the cuckolding of
John the Carpenter by an Oxford student, Nicholas, boarding with him and his wife Alison;
Absolon, a young man from the local church, also tries to woo her, but is tricked into
kissing her behind instead of her lips. Nicholas has deceived John into believing that
Noah's Flood is about to come again, so John is asleep in a tub hanging high in the roof,
ready to float to safety. Meanwhile Alison and Nicholas are in bed together. The climax
of the tale is one of the finest comic moments in literature, when Absolon burns
Nicholas's behind with a hot iron, Nicholas calls for water, John hears, thinks the flood
has come, cuts the rope holding his tub, and crashes to the floor, breaking an arm. Only
Alison escapes unscathed. The narrator offers no morality.
The Reeve's Prologue and Tale: a fabliau about the cuckolding of a miller told by the
Reeve (who is a carpenter, and very angry with the Miller for his tale); two Cambridge
students punish a dishonest miller by having sex with his wife and daughter while asleep
all in one room. Again, the end involves violence, as the miller discovers what has
happened but is struck on the head by his wife because his bald pate is all she can see
in the dark.
The Cook's Prologue and Tale: only a short fragment exists.
Fragment II
The Man of Law's Introduction, Prologue, Tale, and Epilogue: a religious romance about
the Roman emperor's christian daughter Constance, who goes to Syria, floats to England,
and finally returns to Rome after many adventures.
Fragment III
The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale: in her Prologue, the Wife of Bath tells the story
of her five marriages, while contesting the anti-feminist attitudes found in books that
she quotes; indirectly, she becomes the proof of the truth of those books. Her Tale is a
Breton Lay about a knight who rapes a girl, is obliged as punishment to find out what
women most desire, learns from an old hag that the answer is mastery over their husbands
and then has to marry her. She is a loathly lady but suddenly becomes beautiful when he
gives her mastery over him after receiving a long lesson on the nature of true nobility.
The tale is related to the ideas the Wife of Bath expresses in the Prologue, it is also a
kind of wish-fulfillment for a woman no longer quite young. (see below, for Gower's
version of the same story)
The Friar's Prologue and Tale: a comic tale about a summoner (church lawyer) who goes to
hell after an old woman curses him from her heart.
The Summoner's Prologue and Tale: a coarse joke told in revenge about a friar who has to
find a method of sharing a fart he has been given equally among all his fellow-friars.
Fragment IV
The Clerk's Prologue and Tale: a pathetic tale of popular origin, adapted by Chaucer from
a French version of Petrarch's Latin translation of a tale in Boccaccio's Decameron. The
unlikely and terrible story of the uncomplaining Griselda who is made to suffer appalling
pain and humiliation by her husband Walter. Griselda is of very humble origin; Walter
chooses her like God choosing Israel. Suddenly he turns against her, takes away her
children, sends her back home, and years later demands that she help welcome the new
bride he has decided to marry. Without resisting, she obeys, and at last finds her rights
and children restored to her by Walter who says he was just testing her! The narrator
cannot decide if she is a model wife for anti-feminists or an image of humanity in the
hands of an arbitrary destiny.
The Merchant's Prologue, Tale, and Epilogue: a bitter fabliau-style tale of an old
husband, Januarius, with a young wife, May; at the end, the blind old man is shown
embracing a pear-tree, in the branches of which May is having sex with a young man. The
gods suddenly restore his sight and he sees them, but May convinces him that it is thanks
to her exertions that he can see, that it is a form of prayer.
Fragment V
The Squire's Introduction and Tale: a fantasy romance. King Cambuscan of Tartary receives
on his birthday gifts from the king of Arabia: a brass horse that can fly, for his
daughter Canace a mirror that shows coming dangers and King Solomon's ring by which she
can understand birds, and also a magic sword. After Canace has heard a falcon tell the
sad story of her love, the mysterious story breaks off, unfinished.
The Franklin's Prologue and Tale: a Breton lay. The lady Dorigen is wooed by a squire,
and she says she will accept him when all the rocks in the sea are gone. By the help of a
magician he achieves this, and Dorigen's husband, told of her promise, says that she must
keep her word. Touched by such sincerity, the squire releases her from her promise.
Fragment VI
The Physician's Tale: a Roman moral tale from Livy, about Virginia, who is killed by her
father to save her from the dishonouring intentions of a corrupt judge.
The Pardoner's Introduction, Prologue, and Tale: in the Prologue, the Pardoner reveals
his own nature as a covetous deceiver; his Tale is a sermon, showing his skill, but he
concludes by inviting the pilgrims to give him money and they get angry. 
In the Tale, a great showpiece of moral rhetoric quite unfitted for such a rogue, he
tells an exemplum against greed about three wild young men who set out to kill Death; a
mysterious old man they meet tells them they will find him under a tree, but they find
there gold instead. One goes to buy wine, and is killed by his two friends on his return;
they drink the wine, that he has poisoned, and also die.
Fragment VII
The Shipman's Tale: a fabliau in which a merchant's wife offers to sleep with a monk if
he gives her money; he borrows the money from the merchant, sleeps with the wife, and
later tells the merchant (who asks for his money on returning from a journey) that he has
repaid it to his wife! She says that she has spent it all, and offers to repay her
husband through time together in bed. The tale seems written to be told by a woman,
perhaps it was originally given to the Wife of Bath?
The Prioress's Prologue and Tale: a religious tale, in complete contrast to the
Shipman's. A little boy is killed by wicked Jews because he sings a hymn to Mary as he
walks through their street. His dead body continues to sing the hymn, so the murder is
found out.
The Prologue and Chaucer's Tale of Sir Thopas: a romance of the English kind, it mentions
heroes such as Horn, Bevis, Guy. It is written in what seems to be a parody of English
popular romance, in rattling tail-rhyme stanzas (an four-stress couplet followed by a
three-stress line, twice, the third and sixth line rhyming). The hero is called Sir
Thopas, he is eager to love an elf-queen but as he arrives in fairy-land he meets a
giant, whom he avoids. Soon after this, Harry Bailey, the inn-keeper, stops the tale:
Namoore of this, for Goddes dignitee! And Chaucer the pilgrim explains that he can do no
better in rhyme! 
Instead Chaucer offers to tell a little thing in prose, the Tale of Melibee translated
from French and covering twenty pages! It is more a treatise than a tale. It contains a
vague story, but mostly consists of moral debate full of moral advice in pithy sententiae
about the best way of dealing with problems and how to take advice.
The Monk's Prologue and Tale: a series of seventeen tragedies of varying length, in the
Fall of Princes tradition. The stories come from various sources, including the Bible and
Boccaccio, and tell of the deeds of Fortune in the unhappy ends of famous people,
including some near-contemporaries. At last the Knight stops the series, which claims to
illustrate the power of Fortune, but becomes a list of pathetic case-histories.
The Nun's Priest's Prologue, Tale, and Epilogue: a beast-fable told in a variety of
styles, mock-heroic and pedantic mainly. In place of the brevity of the ordinary fable
(cf Aesop) there are constant digressions and interminable speeches. The main characters
are Chauntecleer and his lady Pertelote, a cock and a hen in a farmyard; Chauntecleer
dreams of a fox (he has never seen one) and this leads to a debate on the meaning of
dreams. A fox then appears, flatters Chauntecleer, then grabs him but the cock suggests
he insult the people chasing him and escapes when the fox opens his mouth to speak. The
moral of the tale for the reader is left unclear.
Fragment VIII
The Second Nun's Prologue and Tale: a religious legend of the miracles and martyrdom of
St Cecilia and her Roman husband Valerian. She instructs people to the end, even when her
head has been almost completely cut off.
The Canon's Yeoman's Prologue and Tale: suddenly two new characters come riding up to
join the pilgrims, a rather dubious Canon who knows alchemy, and his companion who boasts
about his master's science and knavery, then tells a bitter story about a canon who
tricks a priest out of a lot of money by pretending to teach him how to make precious
metals. The Prologue and Tale make up a vivid portrait unlike anything else found in the
Tales, shifting as they do between the Yeoman's admiration for his master and his hatred
of him and his devilish arts.
Fragment IX
The Manciple's Prologue and Tale: a tale found in Ovid about why the crow is black; it
used to be white and could talk, until it told Phoebus that his wife was unfaithful. He
kills her, then repents and punishes the bird. The tone of this tale is puzzling, it is
neither pathetic nor comic.
Fragment X
The Parson's Prologue and Tale: clearly designed to be the last tale in the collection,
this is no tale but a long moral treatise translated from two Latin works on Penitence
and on the Seven Deadly Sins. 
At the end of the Parson's Tale, in the Retraccion, the maker of this book asks Christ to
forgive him: and namely my translations and enditings of worldly vanities, the which I
revoke in my retractions: as is the book of Troilus; the book also of Fame; the book of
the xxv ladies; the book of the Duchess; the book of St Valentine's Day of the Parliament
of Birds; the tales of Canterbury, thilke that sowen into sin.... 
Yet this Retraction serves to publicize Chaucer's works and had no effect on their later
publication and distribution.
The Canterbury Tales has always been among the most popular works of the English literary
heritage. When Caxton introduced printing into England, it was the first major secular
work that he printed, in 1478, with a second corrected edition following in 1484. This
was in turn reprinted three times, before William Thynne published Chaucer's Collected
Works in 1532. 
In the Reformation period, Chaucer's reputation as a precursor of the Reform movement was
helped by the addition of a pro-Reformation Plowman's Tale in a 1542 edition. In 1561,
even Lydgate's Siege of Thebes was added. The edition by Thomas Speght in 1598 was the
first to offer a glossary; his text was revised in 1602 and this version was reprinted
several times over the next hundred years, although Chaucer was not really to the taste
of the Augustan readers. The first scholarly edition of the Canterbury Tales was
published by Thomas Tyrwhitt in 1775.
In the last year of his life (1700) John Dryden wrote a major appreciation of Chaucer,
based mainly on his knowledge of the General Prologue and certain tales which he had
adapted into his own age's style:
In the first place, as he is the father of English poetry, I hold him in the same degree
of veneration as the Grecians held Homer, or the Romans Virgil. He is a perpetual
fountain of good sense; learned in all sciences; and, therefore, speaks properly on all
subjects. As he knew what to say, so he knows also when to leave off; a continence which
is practiced by few writers, and scarcely by any of the ancients, excepting Virgil and
Horace... Chaucer followed Nature everywhere, but was never so bold to go beyond her....
He must have been a man of a most wonderful comprehensive nature, because, as it has been
truly observed of him, he has taken into the compass of his Canterbury Tales the various
manners and humors (as we now call them) of the whole English nation in his age. Not a
single character has escaped him.... there is such a variety of game springing up before
me that I am distracted in my choice, and know not which to follow. 'Tis sufficient to
say, according to the proverb, that here is God's plenty.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reading the Canterbury Tales
Each Tale is presented as a separate 'work' which can be read and appreciated in its own
right. There are many different classes of 'Tale' ranging from the saint's life (SNT) and
the theological treatise (ParsT) through romance (KT) to the fabliau (MilT, RvT). By
creating the Pilgrimage framework, Chaucer adds an extra dimension to each Tale by
attributing it to a more or less distinctly characterized pilgrim. The question of the
relationship between each Tale and its fictional pilgrim-teller is much debated. Usually,
once a Tale has begun, it continues to the end without further reference to the
pilgrimage framework. The interruption of Chaucer's Tale about Sir Thopas and of the
Monk's Tale about falls of princes by weary pilgrims, and of the Pardoner's final
salesman's speech by an angry Host, are powerful exceptions.
Each Tale has its own style, which is entirely determined by the kind of work it is, and
is in no sense a 'dramatic' style reflecting the individuality of the proclaimed
narrator. The Miller may be drunk, the narratorial voice of the Miller's Tale is not a
drunken one. On the other hand, the Miller, we are told, is a 'churl' (line 3182) and he
tells a churlish kind of story in terms of morality and respectability at least, no
matter how brilliantly. The Knight is noble and his Tale is a romance of the kind
associated with royal courts. There seems usually to be this kind of suitability of Tale
to teller. 
However, it must be admitted that a number of Tales were left by Chaucer without any
introductory pilgrimage link-passage, one sometimes being provided by editors in the 15th
century, so that the attribution of them to a particular pilgrim may not be Chaucer's.
The Shipman's Tale includes lines in which the pilgrim-narrator refers to himself as a
woman. This may indicate that originally this tale about sex and money had been given to
the Wife of Bath and that after she was given another tale Chaucer never had time to
remove those lines. 
After the General Prologue, the pilgrims come into their own in brief link-passages which
are in many cases full of tension as two or more of the rowdier pilgrims nearly come to
blows. Always someone intervenes to restore order and the next Tale is introduced. Two
pilgrims, the Wife of Bath and the Pardoner, are given a far more significant
development. Each of them has a Prologue of considerable length in which they become, as
it were, the subject of their own self-telling. Each of these Prologues is rooted in
traditions of satire but goes far beyond them in establishing a composite portrayal of a
dynamic individual in dramatic monologue.
The most important function of the pilgrimage framework, however, is the question it
leaves hovering over each of the Tales as it is told: Is this Tale the best Tale? The
Host's proposal of a contest invites the reader to judge all the Tales but at the same
time requires the reader to reflect on the criteria by which the Tales are to be judged.
What is the purpose of tale-telling, indeed of all discourse? Sentence or solas? Wisdom
or pleasure? The value of a tale becomes more and more related to the value of life, and
the Parson is not simply a kill-joy when he declares: 'Thou getest fable noon ytoold for
me' (you get no fable told by me) and instead offers a treatise on sin and salvation.
Chaucer leads the reader to the point where the ability of any fictional tale to tell the
truth is challenged, though not necessarily as radically denied as the Parson would wish.
The Parson himself is a fictional character, after all, a part of a Tale.
The reader is at each moment invited to read the Tales in such a way as not to eliminate
any of these dimensions. 

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