69
See also: One Thousand and One Nights 44–45 ■ The Decameron 102 ■ Wuthering Heights 132–37 ■
The Hound of the Baskervilles 208 ■ If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler 298–99 ■ The Blind Assassin 326–27
the narrative to include a range
of personalities, whose stories
encompassed diverse themes.
Later works of the genre
include Emily Brontë’s Wuthering
Heights and Arthur Conan Doyle’s
Sherlock Holmes detective stories.
The technique is still in use and
many works of Modernist and
postmodernist fiction play with
framing narratives, for example
Italo Calvino’s If on a Winter’s
Night a Traveler. The device is also
often used in plays and movies.
Literary innovation
Chaucer probably began writing
The Canterbury Tales in about
1387, during a brief absence from
his official court duties and career
as a civil servant. It marked a
significant change in his literary
direction: his other poems—
including his first major work (an
elegy in the form of a dream vision)
and Troilus and Criseyde, his
retelling of the love story set during
the siege of Troy—were mainly
concerned with courtly themes and
written primarily to he heard by
court audiences. The Canterbury
Tales, however, was written for
a far wider audience, who were
probably intended to read the
work rather than just listen to it.
The text is written in Middle
English, as opposed to the Latin or
French that was commonly used for
courtly poetry of the time. Chaucer
was not the first to do this, but it
has been argued that he played a
major role in popularizing the use of
the vernacular in English literature.
Significantly, too, The Canterbury
Tales paints a remarkable picture
of late medieval English society,
depicting men and women of all
classes, from the nobility through
to the laboring classes.
Sondry folk
The Canterbury Tales opens with
a General Prologue that sets the
scene and creates a framework for
the tales that follow. The frame
story concerns a group of 29
pilgrims on their way to the shrine
of St. Thomas Becket in Canterbury
Cathedral, in southern England. The
pilgrims meet at the Tabard Inn, in
Southwark, near London, where the
narrator, Geoffrey Chaucer, joins ❯❯
RENAISSANCE TO ENLIGHTENMENT
Aristocrats or nobles
- The Knight
- The Prioress
- The Monk
- The Friar
Those with commercial
wealth
- The Merchant
- The Man of Law
- The Clerk
- The Franklin (landowner)
Guildsmen
- The Haberdasher
- The Dyer
- The Carpenter
- The Weaver
- The Tapestry Maker
The lower class
- The Manciple
- The Miller
- The Reeve
- The Summoner
- The Pardoner
The middle class
- The Cook
- The Shipman
- The Physician
- The Wife of Bath
The virtuous poor
- The Parson
- The Plowman
At nyght was come
into that hostelrye
Wel nyne and twenty
in a compaignye
Of sondry folk...
The Canterbury Tales
Chaucer’s characters:
class and occupation
Early editions of The Canterbury
Tales contained woodcuts to help
make the text more accessible to a
wide range of readers. Shown here
are the pilgrims sharing a meal.
US_068-071_CanterburyTales.indd 69 02/11/2015 14:44