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during a particularly turbulent
period. The Black Death of 1348–49
had killed a third of the population,
the Peasant’s Revolt of 1381 had
demonstrated cracks in the feudal
system, and the authority of the
church was being questioned,
not least for its corrupt practices.
Chaucer’s tales reflect many
of these events, often mocking
and satirizing the hypocrisy of the
church. In the Pardoner’s Tale,
the Pardoner is shown to be guilty
of the very sins he is preaching
against, while the Friar’s Tale is
a satirical attack on summoners—
ecclesiastical officers whose role
was to summon to court sinful
members of the diocese. It is not
surprising that the Summoner’s
Tale is an attack on friars.
Unfinished work
Chaucer borrowed from numerous
sources when writing The
Canterbury Tales. The Knight’s
Tale is based on Boccaccio’s epic
poem Teseida, and there are other
references within the Tales to
Boccaccio’s work. Chaucer’s
other sources included Ovid, the
Bible, chivalric works such as Sir
Gawain and the Green Knight,
and, possibly, works by his friend
the English poet John Gower.
Scholars do not know what
Chaucer’s final intention was for
The Canterbury Tales, nor even the
order in which he wished the tales
to appear, or whether the work was
finished. The only clue is in the
General Prologue, with its plan
for the pilgrims to tell four stories
each. However, there are only 24
tales, so not all the pilgrims tell
even one tale. Nor do any of the
storytellers or the Host indicate the
sequence or numbering of any tale.
Enduring masterpiece
Evidence indicates that Chaucer
was still working on the Tales
when he died. There is no original
manuscript in his own hand;
instead there are fragments that
would have been scribed by
someone else. The earliest is the
Hengwrt manuscript, produced
shortly after Chaucer’s death. The
sequence most commonly used
today, however, is based on the
15th-century Ellesmere manuscript,
which divides the text into 10
fragments, containing varying
numbers of tales. The tales are
grouped according to clues or links
within the text, and end with the
Parson’s Tale, a long prose sermon
on the Seven Deadly Sins. This is
followed by Chaucer’s Retraction, a
curious apology in which the author
asks forgiveness for the vulgar,
secular elements of his works. The
exact significance of this apology is
unclear, although some have seen it
as a deathbed repentance.
Despite the uncertainties
surrounding its structure and plot,
The Canterbury Tales is recognized
as a masterpiece, and one of the
most important literary works in
the English language. Its humor,
bawdiness, pathos, and satirical
observations remain unequaled
today, more than 600 years after
it was written. ■
RENAISSANCE TO ENLIGHTENMENT
Geoffrey Chaucer
Not just a great English poet
but also a courtier, civil
servant, and diplomat,
Chaucer was probably born
in London around 1343. His
father, a wine merchant, was
eager to advance his son’s
career and secured a place for
him as a page in the Countess
of Ulster’s household. From
there, Chaucer entered the
service of Edward III, first as
a soldier, then as a diplomat,
traveling to France and Italy,
where he would have read the
works of Dante and Boccaccio.
From 1374 to 1386 he held a
post as controller of customs.
Chaucer married in 1366,
and gained a patron—John of
Gaunt, the king’s fourth son.
Chaucer wrote his first major
poem, Book of the Duchess
(1369) as an elegy to Gaunt’s
first wife, Blanche. He fell on
hard times during Richard II’s
reign; however, in 1389 was
appointed clerk of the king’s
royal building projects. He
died in 1400 and was buried
in Westminster Abbey.
Other key works
1379 The House of Fame
c.1385 Troilus and Criseyde
c.1388 The Legend of
Good Women
For though we sleep
or wake, or roam, or ride,
Ay fleeth the time;
it nyl no man abyde.
The Canterbury Tales
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