West Bengal State University/ Barasat University History Paper I Notes
The Canterbury Tales Summary
The
Canterbury Tales begins with the introduction of each of
the pilgrims making their journey to Canterbury to the shrine of Thomasa Becket.
These pilgrims include a Knight, his son the Squire, the Knight's Yeoman, a
Prioress, a Second Nun, a Monk, a Friar, a Merchant, a Clerk, a Man of Law, a
Franklin, a Weaver, a Dyer, a Carpenter, a Tapestry-Maker, a Haberdasher, a
Cook, a Shipman, a Physician, a Parson, a Miller, a Manciple, a Reeve, a
Summoner, a Pardoner, the Wife of Bath, and Chaucer himself. Congregating at
the Tabard Inn, the pilgrims decide to tell stories to pass their time on the
way to Canterbury. The Host of the Tabard Inn sets the rules for
the tales. Each of the pilgrims will tell two stories on the way to Canterbury,
and two stories on the return trip. The Host will decide whose tale is best for
meaningfulness and for fun. They decide to draw lots to see who will tell the
first tale, and the Knight receives the honor.
The Knight's Tale is a tale about two
knights, Arcite and Palamon, who are
captured in battle and imprisoned in Athens under the order of King Theseus. While imprisoned in a tower, both see Emelye, the sister
of Queen Hippolyta, and fall instantly in
love with her. Both knights eventually leave prison separately: a friend of
Arcite begs Theseus to release him, while Palamon later escapes. Arcite returns
to the Athenian court disguised as a servant, and when Palamon escapes he
suddenly finds Arcite. They fight over Emelye, but their fight is stopped when
Theseus finds them. Theseus sets the rules for a duel between the two knights
for Emelye's affection, and each raise an army for a battle a year from that
date. Before the battle, Arcite prays to Mars for victory in battle, Emelye
prays to Diana that she may marry happily, and Palamon prays to Venus to have
Emelye as his wife. All three gods hear their prayers and argue over whose
should get precedence, but Saturn decides to mediate. During their battle,
Arcite indeed is victorious, but as soon as he is crowned victor, he is killed.
Before he dies, he reconciles with Palamon and tells him that he deserves to
marry Emelye. Palamon and Emelye marry.
When the Knight finishes his tale, everybody
is pleased with its honorable qualities, but the drunken Miller insists that he
shall tell the next tale. The Miller's Tale, in many ways a
version of the Knight’s, is a comic table in which Nicholas, a student who lives with John the carpenter and his much younger
wife, Alison, falls in love with Alison. Another man, the
courtly romantic Absolon, also falls
in love with Alison. Nicholas contrives to sleep with Alison by telling John
that a flood equal to Noah's flood will come soon, and the only way that he,
Nicholas and Alison will survive is by staying in separate kneading tubs placed
on the roof of houses, out of sight of all. While John remained in this
kneading tub, Nicholas and Alison leave to have sex, but are interrupted by
Absolon, singing to Alison at her bedroom window. She told him to close his
eyes and he would receive a kiss. He did so, and she pulled down her pants so
that he could kiss her arse. The humiliated Absolon got a hot iron from a
blacksmith and returned to Alison. This time, Nicholas tried the same trick,
and Absolon branded his backside. Nicholas shouted for water, awakening John,
who was asleep on the roof. Thinking the flood had come, he cut the rope and
came crashing through the floor of his house, landing in the cellar.
The pilgrims laughed heartily at this tale,
but Oswald the Reeve takes offense, thinking that the Miller meant to disparage
carpenters. In response, The Reeve's Tale tells the story of
a dishonest Miller, Symkyn, who
repeatedly cheated his clients, which included a Cambridge college. Two
Cambridge students, Aleyn and John,
went to the miller to buy meal and corn, but while they were occupied Symkyn
let their horses run free and stole their corn. They were forced to stay with
Symkyn for the night. That night, Aleyn seduced the miller's daughter, Molly, while John seduced the miller's wife.
Thanks to a huge confusion of whose bed is who in the dark, Aleyn tells Symkyn
of his exploits, thinking he is John: and the two fight. The miller's wife,
awaking and thinking the devil had visited her, hit Symkyn over the head with a
staff, knocking him unconscious, and the two students escaped with the corn
that Symkyn had stolen.
The Cook's Tale was intended to follow the Reeve's
Tale, but this tale only exists as a fragment. Following this tale is the Man
of Law's Tale, which tells the story of Constance, the daughter of a Roman
emperor who becomes engaged to the Sultan of Syria on the condition that he
converts to Christianity. Angered by his order to convert his country from
Islam, the mother of the Sultan assassinates her son and Constance barely
escapes. She is sent on a ship that lands in Britain, where she is taken in by
the warden of a nearby castle and his wife, Dame Hermengild. Both
of them soon convert to Christianity upon meeting her. A young knight fell in
love with Constance, but when she refused him, he murdered Dame Hermengild and
attempted to frame Constance. However, when King Alla made the knight swear
on the Bible that Constance murdered Hermengild, his eyes burst. Constance
marries King Alla and they have a son, Mauritius, who is born when Alla is
at war in Scotland. Lady Donegildcontrives to have Constance
banished by intercepting the letters between Alla and Constance and replacing
them with false ones. Constance is thus sent away again, and on her voyage her
ship comes across a Roman ship. A senator returns her to Rome, where nobody realizes
that she is the daughter of the emperor. Eventually, King Alla makes a
pilgrimage to Rome, where he meets Constance once more, and the Roman emperor
realizes that Mauritius is his grandson and names him heir to the throne.
The Wife of Bath begins
her tale with a long dissertation on marriage in which she recounts each of her
five husbands. Her first three husbands were old men whom she would hector into
providing for her, using guilt and refusal of sexual favors. However, the final
two husbands were younger men, more difficult to handle. The final
husband, Jankin, was a
twenty-year-old, half the Wife of Bath's age. He was more trouble, as he
refused to let the Wife of Bath dominate him and often read literature that
proposed that women be submissive. When she tore a page out of one of his books,
Jankin struck her, causing her to be deaf in one ear. However, he felt so
guilty at his actions that from that point in the marriage, he was totally
submissive to her and the two remained happy. The Wife of Bath's Tale is itself a story of
marriage dynamic. It tells the tale of a knight who, as punishment for raping a
young woman, is sentenced to death. However, he is spared by the queen, who
will grant him freedom if he can answer the question "what do women
want?" The knight cannot find a satisfactory answer until he meets an old
crone, who promises to tell him the answer if he marries her. He agrees, and
receives his freedom when he tells the queen that women want sovereignty over
their husbands. However, the knight is dissatisfied that he must marry the old,
low-born hag. She therefore tells him that he can have her as a wife either old
and ugly yet submissive, or young and beautiful yet dominant. He chooses to
have her as a young woman, and although she had authority in marriage the two
were completely happy from that point.
The Friar asks to tell the next
tale, and asks for pardon from the Summoner, for he will tell a tale that
exposes the fraud of that profession. The Friar's Tale tells about a wicked
summoner who, while delivering summons for the church court, comes across a
traveling yeoman who eventually reveals himself to be the devil himself. The
two share trade secrets, and the devil tells him that they will meet again in
hell if the summoner continues to pursue his trade. The summoner visits an old
woman and issues her a summons, then offers to accept a bribe as a payment to
prevent her excommunication. The old woman believes that she is without sin and
curses the summoner. The devil then appears and casts the summoner into hell.
The Summoner was enraged by the
Friar's Tale. Before he begins his tale, he tells a short anecdote: a friar
visited hell and was surprised to see that there were no other friars. The
angel who was with him then lifted up Satan's tail and thousands of friars swarmed out
from his arse. The Summoner's Tale is an equally vitriolic attack on friars. It
tells of a friar who stays with an innkeeper and his wife and bothers them
about not contributing enough to the church and not attending recently. When
the innkeeper tells him that he was not recently in church because he has been
ill and his infant daughter recently died, the friar attempted to placate him
and then asked for donations once more. Thomas the innkeeper promised to give
the friar a “gift” and gives him a loud fart.
The Clerk, an Oxford student who has
remained quiet throughout the journey, tells the next tale on the orders of the
Host. The Clerk's Tale recounts a story about Walter, an Italian marquis who finally decides to
take a wife after the people of his province object to his longtime status as a
bachelor. Walter marries Griselde, a low-born
but amazingly virtuous woman whom everybody loves. However, Walter decides to
test her devotion. When their first child, a daughter, is born, Walter tells
her that his people are unhappy and wish for the child's death. He takes away
the child, presumably to be murdered, but instead sends it to his sister to be
raised. He does the same with their next child, a son. Finally, Walter tells
Griselde that the pope demands that he divorce her. He sends her away from his
home. Each of these tragedies Griselde accepts with great patience. Walter soon
decides to make amends, and sends for his two children. He tells Griselde that
he will marry again, and introduces her to the presumed bride, whom he then
reveals is their daughter. The family is reunited once more. The Clerk ends
with the advice that women should strive to be as steadfast as Griselde, even
if facing such adversity is unlikely and perhaps impossible.
The Merchant praises Griselde for
her steadfast character, but claims that his wife is far different from the
virtuous woman of the Clerk's story. He instead tells a tale of an unfaithful
wife. The Merchant's Tale tells a story of January, an elderly blind knight who decides to
marry a young woman, despite the objections of his brother, Placebo. January marries the young and
beautiful May, who soon becomes dissatisfied with his
sexual attentions to her and decides to have an affair with his squire, Damian, who has secretly wooed her by signs and
tokens. When January and May are in their garden, May sneaks away to have sex
with Damian. The gods Pluto and Proserpina come upon Damian and
May and Pluto restores January's sight so that he may see what his wife is
doing. When January sees what is occurring, May tells him not to believe his
eyes – they are recovering from the blindness - and he believes her: leading to
an on-the-surface happy ending.
The Squire tells the next tale,
which is incomplete. The Squire's Tale begins with a mysterious knight arriving
at the court of Tartary. This knight gives King Cambyuskan a
mechanical horse that can transport him anywhere around the globe and return
him within a day. Further, he gives Canacee, the
daughter of Cambyuskan, a mirror that can discern honesty and a ring that
allows the wearer to know the language of animals and the healing properties of
all herbs. Canacee uses this ring to aid a bird who has been rejected in love,
but the tale then abruptly ends.
The Franklin's Tale that follows tells
of the marriage between the knight Arviragus and
his wife, Dorigen. When
Arviragus travels on a military expedition, Dorigen laments his absence and
fears that, when he returns, his ship will be wrecked upon the rocks off the
shore. A young man, Aurelius, falls in love with her, but she refuses to
return his favors. She agrees to have an affair with Aurelius only on the
condition that he find a way to remove the rocks from the shore, a task she
believes impossible. Aurelius pays a scholar who creates the illusion that the
rocks have disappeared, while Arviragus returns. Dorigen admits to her husband
the promise that she has made, and Arviragus tells her that she must fulfill
that promise. He sends her to have an affair with Aurelius, but he realizes the
pain that it would cause Dorigen and does not make her fulfill the promise. The
student in turn absolves Aurelius of his debt. The tale ends with the question:
which of these men behaved most generously and nobly?
The Physician's Tale that follows tells
of Virginius, a
respected Roman knight whose daughter, Virginia, was an incomparable beauty. Appius, the judge
who governed his town, lusted after Virginia and collaborated with Claudius, who claimed in court that Virginia was his
slave and Virginius had stolen her. Appius orders that Virginia be handed over
to him. Virginius, knowing that Appius and Claudius did this in order to rape
his daughter, instead gave her a choice between death or dishonor. She chooses
death, and Virginius chops off his daughter's head, which he brings to Appius
and Claudius. The people were so shocked by this that they realized that Appius
and Claudius were frauds. Appius was jailed and committed suicide, while
Claudius was banished.
The Pardoner prefaces his tale
with an elaborate confession about the deceptive nature of his profession. He
tells the secrets of his trade, including the presentation of useless items as
saints' relics. The Pardoner's Tale concerns three rioters who search for Death
to vanquish him. They find an old man who tells them that they may find Death
under a nearby tree, but under this tree they only find a large fortune. Two of
the rioters send the third into town to purchase food and drink for the night
(when they intend to escape with their fortune) and while he is gone they plan
to murder him. The third rioter poisons the drink, intending to take all of the
money for himself. When he returns, the two rioters stab him, then drink the
poisoned wine and die themselves. The three rioters thus find Death in the form
of avarice. The Pardoner ends his tale with a diatribe against sin, imploring
the travelers to pay him for pardons, and be absolved, but the Host berates him
scatalogically into silence.
The next story, The Shipman's Tale, is the story of a
thrifty merchant and his wife. The wife tells a monk, the merchant’s close
friend, that she is unhappy in her marriage, and asks if she might borrow a
hundred francs of his. In return for the loan, she agrees, she will sleep with
him. The monk then borrows the money from the merchant himself, sleeps with his
wife, and pays her her husband’s money. When the merchant asks for his money
back, the monk tells him it he gave it to the wife: and when the merchant
confronts his wife, the wife simply tells him that she will repay the debt to
her husband in bed.
The Prioress' Tale tells the story of a
young Christian child who lived in a town in Asia that was dominated by a
vicious Jewish population. One child learned the “Alma redemptoris”, a song
praising the Virgin Mary, and traveled home from school singing it. The Jews,
angry at his behavior, took the child and slit his throat, leaving him in a
cesspit to die. The boy's mother searched frantically for her son. When she
found him, he was not yet dead, for the Virgin Mary had placed a grain on his
tongue that would allow him to speak until it was removed. When this was
removed, the boy passed on to heaven. The story ends with a lament for the
young boy and a curse for the Jews who perpetrated the heinous crime.
Chaucer himself tells the next tale, The Tale
of Sir Thopas, a florid and fantastical poem in rhyming couplets that serves
only to annoy the other pilgrims. The Host interrupts Chaucer shortly into this
tale, and tells him to tell another. Chaucer then tells The Tale of Melibee, one of two
tales that is in prose (the other is the Parson’s Tale). This tale is about
Melibee, a powerful ruler whose enemies attack his family. When deciding
whether to declare war on his enemies, Prudence, his wife, advises him to remain merciful,
and they engage in a long debate over the appropriate course of action. Melibee
finally gives his enemies the option: they can receive a sentence either from
him or from his wife. They submit to Melibee's judgment, and he intends to
disinherit and banish the perpetrators. However, he eventually submits to his
wife's plea for mercy.
The Monk's Tale is not a narrative tale at all, but
instead an account of various historical and literary figures who experience a
fall from grace. These include Adam, Samson, Hercules, King Pedro of Spain,
Bernabo Visconti, Nero, Julius
Caesar, and Croesus. The Knight interrupts the
Monk's Tale, finding his listing of historical tragedies monotonous and
depressing, and is backed up by the Host.
The Nun's Priest's Tale tells the story of
the rooster Chaunticleer and
the hen Pertelote.
Chaunticleer was ill one night and had a disturbing dream that he was chased by
a fox. He feared this dream was prophetic, but Pertelote assured him that his
dream merely stemmed from his imbalanced humours and that he should find herbs
to cure himself. Chaunticleer insisted that dreams are signifiers, but finally
agreed with his wife. However, Chaunticleer is indeed chased by a fox, and
carried off – but is saved when he tricks the fox into opening his mouth,
allowing Chaunticleer to fly away.
Chaucer follows this with The Second Nun's Tale. This tale is a
biography of Saint Cecilia, who converts her husband and brother to
Christianity during the time of the Roman empire, when Christian beliefs were
illegal. Her brother and husband are executed for their beliefs, and she
herself is cut three times with a sword during her execution, but does not
immediately die. Rather, she lingers on for several more days, during which
time she orders that her property be distributed to the poor. Upon her
death Pope Urban declared her a saint.
After the Second Nun finishes her tale, a
Canon (alchemist) and his Yeoman join the band of travelers. The Canon had heard how they
were telling tales, and wished to join them. The Yeoman speaks incessantly
about the Canon, praising him hugely, but then retracts his praise, annoying
the Canon, who suddenly departs. The Yeoman therefore decides to tell a tale
about a duplicitous Canon: not, he says, his master. The Canon's Yeoman's Tale
is a story of the work of a canon and the means by which they defraud people by
making them think that they can duplicate money.
The Host tells the Cook to tell the next
tale, but he is too drunk to coherently tell one. The Manciple therefore tells a
tale. The Manciple's Tale is the story of how Phoebus, when he assumed mortal form, was a jealous
husband. He monitored his wife closely, fearing that she would be unfaithful.
Phoebus had a white crow that could speak the language of humans and could sing
beautiful. When the white crow learns that Phoebus' wife was unfaithful,
Phoebus plucked him of his feathers and threw him out of doors. According to
the Manciple, this explains why crows are black and can only sing in an
unpleasant tone.
The Parson tells the final tale.
The Parson's Tale is not a narrative tale at all, however, but rather an
extended sermon on the nature of sin and the three parts necessary for
forgiveness: contrition, confession, and satisfaction. The tale gives examples
of the seven deadly sins and explains them, and also details what is necessary
for redemption. Chaucer ends the tales with a retraction, asking those who were
offended by the tales to blame his rough manner and lack of education, for his
intentions were not immoral, while asking those who found something redeemable
in the tales to give credit to Christ.
The Wife of Bath
The Wife of Bath is intriguing to almost anyone who has
ever read her prologue, filled with magnificent, but for some, preposterous
statements. First of all, the Wife is the forerunner of the modern liberated
woman, and she is the prototype of a certain female figure that often appears
in later literature. Above all, she is, for the unprejudiced reader, Chaucer's
most delightful creature, even if some find her also his most outrageous. Her
doctrine on marriage is shocking to her companions, evoking such responses that
the single man never wants to marry. For the Clerk and the Parson, her views
are not only scandalous but heretical; they contradict the teachings of the
church. In fact, her views prompt the Clerk to tell a tale of a character
completely opposite from the Wife of Bath's tale.
Her prologue presents a view of marriage that no pilgrim
had ever conceived of and is followed by a tale that proves her to be correct.
She expresses her views with infinite zest and conviction, with such determined
assurance in the correctness that no pilgrim can argue with her logic; they can
be shocked by it, but they cannot refute it. As she unfolds her life history in
her prologue, she reveals that the head of the house should always be the
woman, that a man is no match for a woman, and that as soon as they learn to
yield to the sovereignty of women, men will find a happy marriage.
In her prologue, the Wife admirably supports her position
by reference to all sort of scholarly learning, and when some source of
authority disagrees with her point of view, she dismisses it and relies instead
on her own experience. Because she has had the experience of having had five
husbands — and is receptive to a sixth — there is no better proof of her views
than her own experience, which is better than a scholarly diatribe.
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