Title: The Canterbury Tales
1The Canterbury Tales
2Who was Chaucer?
- Son of a vintner (name is from the French word
for this tradesimilar to Tailor, Smith, Tyler),
he was born to the merchant class. - As an early teen, went to serve as a page in a
noble household and spent the rest of his life in
close association with the ruling nobility.
3Chaucer the Ellesmere Manuscript
4The man who bridged the gap!
- Chaucer married a wife related to Englands
rulers. - His granddaughter, Alice, married both the Earl
of Salisbury and the Duke of Norfolk (not at the
same time!)
5During his life, he was
- A page
- A soldier
- The valet of Edward III
- A diplomat
- A Controller of wool, Englands largest trade
- A Justice of the Peace and Knight of the Shire
(member of Parliament)
6During his life, he was
- And was highly successful at currying royal favor
and money!
7Oh, and he also wrote poetry.
8During his time, he was considered the greatest
English poet.
- Shakespeare is still his only serious rival for
this title, though there are certainly other
greats.
9Chaucers Sources
- French and Italian poets, especially Dante and
Boccaccio - Medieval romances (the Knights tale is both an
excellent Medieval romance as well as a satire of
the genre) - The Roman author Boethius (Influenced Chaucers
philosophy of life)
10Chaucers Sources
- Roman author Ovid for the theme of love as
well as other classical authors - Allegories about the Seven Deadly
SinsLustSlothGluttonyAvaricePrideEnvy
Hatred or Anger
11Chaucers philosophy of life
- To live wholeheartedly in the world while
remaining spiritually detached from it.
Norton Anthology of British Literature
12Chaucer had no illusions about the world and its
inhabitants. . .
- but was deeply fond of them both.
- Norton Anthology of British Literature
13Why was/is Chaucers writing so successful?
- A commoner born, he sympathized with and
understood the lower classes. - He also won full acceptance from--and understood
perfectlythe people he associated with at
court. - Buthe remains intellectually detached from both.
He is a keen observer of life. - Norton Anthology of British Literature
14The Canterbury Tales
- Originally to be 120 stories (2 per pilgrim)only
wrote 22 - Uses the framing device of a pilgrimage to
Canterbury to gather all types and classes of
people in one place.
15Contemporaries of Chaucer also used framing
devices
- Boccacios DecameronTo while away the time while
avoiding the plague, ten Italian nobles each tell
ten tales over ten days. The situation acts as a
framing device for the various stories.
16Why Canterbury?
- Remember the little drama between Henry II and
Thomas a Beckett?
17Canterbury
- Became a popular pilgrimage site people
believed that it had healing powers.People
believed that you could have a tangible
connection to God and the saints. - An excellent play about this Murder in the
Cathedral, T. S. Eliot
18Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages
19Why April?
- Wanderlust after the long winter.
- Near the season of Easter.
20While some went for purely religious reasons. . .
- Many pilgrims merely wanted to travel for
recreationthink Spring Break.
21Chaucer offers unique views on humanity. For
example. . .
- Women typically eithermodels of piety,
industry, virture (like the Virgin Mary)
ORshrews and temptresses (leading men to vice
with their uncontrollably lecherous natures).
This view was promoted by the clergy to encourage
celibacy.
22Chaucers women are neither.
23Chaucers characters mediate between the world
of types and the world of real people.The
Norton Anthology of British Literature
24Chaucers decision to write his tales in English.
- Considered extremely riskyalmost everything was
published in Latin. BUT
25During Chaucers life. . .
- The reading public was expandingespecially the
merchant classes (emerging middle class).
26Chaucer believed that his quintessentially
English poem should be written in the vernacular.
27Chaucers High Style
28Why he sometimes seems to take longer than
necessary to say something.
- Classical technique called dilation uses an
ornate style to describe events in a formal,
detailed way.
29A Classical Example-- from The Aeneid
30I sing of arms and the man who first from the
coast of Troy, driven by fate, came to Italy and
the Lavinian shores much buffeted on sea and
land by violence from above, through Junos
unforgiving wrath, and much suffering in war also
till he should build a city and bring his gods to
Latium, whence came the Latin race, the lords of
Alba, and lofty walls of Rome.From The Aeneid,
Virgil
31Put simply, this translates. . .
32A Medieval audience would have HATED the briefer
version. They liked for a tale to take a long
time to tell!
33The Tales
- Interconnect with the Prologue thematically.
- As you read a few, think about HOW the tale fits
its teller.