Canterbury Tales: Introductory Notes 2
The Tales and The Prologue
The Canterbury Tales(in general)
• Chaucer presents the world as he sees it• Began to write it in 1387 (he had written a large
number of works prior to this)• Incomplete (Chaucer died in 1400). “The General
Prologue” and only 22 tales completed; there were supposed to be 120 total
• Shows a cross section of Medieval society
The Tales (cont)
• It has a frame story of the pilgrimage to Canterbury (80 miles from London) to visit the tomb of the martyr Thomas à Beckett (killed in Canterbury Cathedral in 1170)
• pilgrimages to shrines were mass activities in the Middle Ages, partly because they were as likely to be vacations as religious observances
Canterbury Location• http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&q=canterbury+england&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Canterbury,+United+Kingdom&gl=us&ei=faijTJ6LFIaKlwf
895GXBA&ved=0CCgQ8gEwAA&ll=51.45743,0.576782&spn=1.745651,3.147583&z=8• Exterior/overview of cathedral
• http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://neatnik2009.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/canterbury-cathedral-exterior.jpg%3Fw%3D562%26h%3D385&imgrefurl=http://neatnik2009.wordpress.com/2009/10/06/feast-of-lanfranc-of-canterbury-may-28/&h=385&w=562&sz=146&tbnid=ldlbH4vfwgqGEM:&tbnh=91&tbnw=133&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcanterbury%2Bcathedral&zoom=1&q=canterbury+cathedral&hl=en&usg=__ObzBhTs7n1HAiNoaW-LOknjIQKY=&sa=X&ei=IqmjTL_sKsLflgf3uK3XAw&ved=0CEgQ9QEwBQ
• Cathedral at night• http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.ippnw-students.org/OTT/canterbury.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.ippnw-
students.org/OTT/route.html&h=768&w=1024&sz=138&tbnid=aerfxFTb_tEdJM:&tbnh=113&tbnw=150&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcanterbury%2Bcathedral&zoom=1&q=canterbury+cathedral&hl=en&usg=__cw2Bp8qgisYt-e35tzqakN28XTw=&sa=X&ei=IqmjTL_sKsLflgf3uK3XAw&ved=0CEYQ9QEwBA
• Images of Pilgrims• http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://english.basd.k12.wi.us/mocarski/englishliterature/Lit1/lydgate.gif&imgrefurl=http://
english.basd.k12.wi.us/mocarski/englishliterature/Lit1/middleages.html&h=326&w=346&sz=88&tbnid=bmKIth4Pc0aKnM:&tbnh=113&tbnw=120&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcanterbury%2Btales&zoom=1&q=canterbury+tales&hl=en&usg=__zlFC7UiF9B7GQ6QSBqrTumTgedk=&sa=X&ei=nKmjTO2RCoX7lwf4hoHjBA&ved=0CEQQ9QEwBA
• http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.chaucertheatre.org/images/Canterbury_Tales_480.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.chaucertheatre.org/html/GCT_Home.html&h=261&w=480&sz=32&tbnid=CeJCwFD8xhXcyM:&tbnh=70&tbnw=129&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcanterbury%2Btales&zoom=1&q=canterbury+tales&hl=en&usg=__bVNEVTRQckDevzPXbLSSNDhz0cM=&sa=X&ei=56ujTNeSJYK8lQe-p6ycBA&ved=0CEcQ9QEwBg
The Tales (cont)
• 26 pilgrims actually described; 29 referenced. Chaucer is one of the pilgrims for total of 30.
• plan was to tell two tales each on the way to Canterbury and two more tales on the way back (30 pilgrims x 4 tales=120 total tales planned)
• a tale is often so well fitted to a pilgrim’s character and opinion that the tale and teller illuminate each other
• The Tales are distinguished from other similar types of the period because of the realism of the characters; they are more than types.
General Information
• Tabard Inn (leave from here)• The owner is Harry Bailey (he is the host who
established the contest---winner gets a free dinner paid for by other pilgrims)
• Harry will be the judge of the best tale• The telling of the tales will help to pass the time
more quickly
The Writing of the Tales
• Narrative POV• narrator is actually a character (seems to approve)• creates multiple levels of irony• suspicions that author does not agree with narrator• written in iambic pentameter• lines rhyme in couplets
The Prologue
• Opening lines provide a setting and motivation for the Canterbury pilgrimage
• Prologue contains all levels of English life• The order of the introduction of each
pilgrim is important because it provides the social standing of the different occupations; it begins with the highest social rank and descends in order.
The Prologue: Characters
Highest rank is aristocracy or nobility • Knight and his household, including Squire (his
son)• Prioress• Monk• Friar (should be in lower class but begged so well
he is now in the company of nobles)
The Prologue: Characters
Commercial Wealthy class• Merchant (illegally makes his money from selling
French coins)• Sergeant of Law (used knowledge of law to buy
up foreclosed property)• Clerk (good manners, knowledge of books)• Franklin (made enough money to be a country
gentleman and push for a place of nobility)
The Prologue: Characters
Guildsmen similar to specialized unions of craftsmen or guildsHaberdasher (makes men’s accessories)Dyer (dyes fabric)Carpenter (works with wood)Weaver (makes fabric)Tapestry-maker (makes rugs/carpets/wall hangings none of them tells a tale
The Prologue: Characters
Middle-class group• Cook (ranked too high, but he is master of his
trade and respected)• Shipman (knowledge of and travels in the world)• Physician (doctor of medicine[much less revered
in Middle Ages than today])• Wife of Bath (included here because of her
knowledge and deportment)
The Prologue: Characters
Virtuous poor or lower class
• Parson
• Plowman (very poor but represents all of the Christian virtues)
The Prologue: Characters
Immoral lower class• Manciple (profits from buying food for the
lawyers in the Inns of Court)• Miller (vulgar, steals from his customers)• Reeve (tells dirty stories and cheats his trusting
young master• Summoner (corrupt, takes bribes)• Pardoner (corrupt: sells fake pardons and fake
relics)
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