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General Prologue

At the Tabard Inn, a tavern in Southwark, near London,the narrator joins a company of twenty-nine pilgrims. The pilgrims,like the narrator, are traveling to the shrine of the martyr SaintThomas Becket in Canterbury. The narrator gives a descriptive accountof twenty-seven of these pilgrims, including a Knight, Squire, Yeoman, Prioress,Monk, Friar, Merchant, Clerk, Man of Law, Franklin, Haberdasher,Carpenter, Weaver, Dyer, Tapestry-Weaver, Cook, Shipman, Physician,Wife, Parson, Plowman, Miller, Manciple, Reeve, Summoner, Pardoner,and Host. (He does not describe the Second Nun or the Nun’s Priest,although both characters appear later in the book.) The Host, whosename, we find out in the Prologue to the Cook’s Tale, is Harry Bailey,suggests that the group ride together and entertain oneanother with stories. He decides that each pilgrim will tell twostories on the way to Canterbury and two on the way back. Whomeverhe judges to be the best storyteller will receive a meal at Bailey’stavern, courtesy of the other pilgrims. The pilgrims draw lots anddetermine that the Knight will tell the first tale.

The Knight’s Tale

Theseus, duke of Athens, imprisons Arcite and Palamon,two knights from Thebes (another city in ancient Greece). From their prison,the knights see and fall in love with Theseus’s sister-in-law, Emelye.Through the intervention of a friend, Arcite is freed, but he isbanished from Athens. He returns in disguise and becomes a page inEmelye’s chamber. Palamon escapes from prison, and the two meetand fight over Emelye. Theseus apprehends them and arranges a tournamentbetween the two knights and their allies, with Emelye as the prize.Arcite wins, but he is accidentally thrown from his horse and dies.Palamon then marries Emelye.

The Miller’s Prologue and Tale

The Host asks the Monk to tell the next tale, but thedrunken Miller interrupts and insists that his tale should be thenext. He tells the story of an impoverished student named Nicholas,who persuades his landlord’s sexy young wife, Alisoun, to spendthe night with him. He convinces his landlord, a carpenter namedJohn, that the second flood is coming, and tricks him into spendingthe night in a tub hanging from the ceiling of his barn. Absolon,a young parish clerk who is also in love with Alisoun, appears outsidethe window of the room where Nicholas and Alisoun lie together.When Absolon begs Alisoun for a kiss, she sticks her rear end outthe window in the dark and lets him kiss it. Absolon runs and getsa red-hot poker, returns to the window, and asks for another kiss;when Nicholas sticks his bottom out the window and farts, Absolonbrands him on the buttocks. Nicholas’s cries for water make thecarpenter think that the flood has come, so the carpenter cuts therope connecting his tub to the ceiling, falls down, and breaks hisarm.

The Reeve’s Prologue and Tale

Because he also does carpentry, the Reeve takes offenseat the Miller’s tale of a stupid carpenter, and counters with hisown tale of a dishonest miller. The Reeve tells the story of twostudents, John and Alayn, who go to the mill to watch the millergrind their corn, so that he won’t have a chance to steal any. Butthe miller unties their horse, and while they chase it, he stealssome of the flour he has just ground for them. By the time the studentscatch the horse, it is dark, so they spend the night in the miller’shouse. That night, Alayn seduces the miller’s daughter, and Johnseduces his wife. When the miller wakes up and finds out what hashappened, he tries to beat the students. His wife, thinking thather husband is actually one of the students, hits the miller overthe head with a staff. The students take back their stolen goodsand leave.

The Cook’s Prologue and Tale

The Cook particularly enjoys the Reeve’s Tale, and offersto tell another funny tale. The tale concerns an apprentice namedPerkyn who drinks and dances so much that he is called “Perkyn Reveler.” Finally,Perkyn’s master decides that he would rather his apprentice leaveto revel than stay home and corrupt the other servants. Perkyn arrangesto stay with a friend who loves drinking and gambling, and who hasa wife who is a prostitute. The tale breaks off, unfinished, afterfifty-eight lines.

The Man of Law’s Introduction, Prologue, Tale, and Epilogue

The Host reminds his fellow pilgrims to waste no time,because lost time cannot be regained. He asks the Man of Law totell the next tale. The Man of Law agrees, apologizing that he cannottell any suitable tale that Chaucer has not already told—Chaucermay be unskilled as a poet, says the Man of Law, but he has toldmore stories of lovers than Ovid, and he doesn’t print tales ofincest as John Gower does (Gower was a contemporary of Chaucer).In the Prologue to his tale, the Man of Law laments the miseriesof poverty. He then remarks how fortunate merchants are, and saysthat his tale is one told to him by a merchant.

In the tale, the Muslim sultan of Syria converts his entiresultanate (including himself) to Christianity in order to persuadethe emperor of Rome to give him his daughter, Custance, in marriage. Thesultan’s mother and her attendants remain secretly faithful to Islam.The mother tells her son she wishes to hold a banquet for him andall the Christians. At the banquet, she massacres her son and all theChristians except for Custance, whom she sets adrift in a rudderlessship. After years of floating, Custance runs ashore in Northumberland,where a constable and his wife, Hermengyld, offer her shelter. Sheconverts them to Christianity.

One night, Satan makes a young knight sneak into Hermengyld’s chamberand murder Hermengyld. He places the bloody knife next to Custance,who sleeps in the same chamber. When the constable returns home,accompanied by Alla, the king of Northumberland, he finds his slainwife. He tells Alla the story of how Custance was found, and Allabegins to pity the girl. He decides to look more deeply into themurder. Just as the knight who murdered Hermengyld is swearing thatCustance is the true murderer, he is struck down and his eyes burstout of his face, proving his guilt to Alla and the crowd. The knightis executed, Alla and many others convert to Christianity, and Custanceand Alla marry.

While Alla is away in Scotland, Custance gives birth toa boy named Mauricius. Alla’s mother, Donegild, intercepts a letterfrom Custance to Alla and substitutes a counterfeit one that claimsthat the child is disfigured and bewitched. She then interceptsAlla’s reply, which claims that the child should be kept and lovedno matter how malformed. Donegild substitutes a letter saying that Custanceand her son are banished and should be sent away on the same shipon which Custance arrived. Alla returns home, finds out what hashappened, and kills Donegild.

After many adventures at sea, including an attempted rape, Custanceends up back in Rome, where she reunites with Alla, who has madea pilgrimage there to atone for killing his mother. She also reuniteswith her father, the emperor. Alla and Custance return to England,but Alla dies after a year, so Custance returns, once more, to Rome.Mauricius becomes the next Roman emperor.

Following the Man of Law’s Tale, the Host asks the Parsonto tell the next tale, but the Parson reproaches him for swearing,and they fall to bickering.

The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale

The Wife of Bath gives a lengthy account of her feelingsabout marriage. Quoting from the Bible, the Wife argues againstthose who believe it is wrong to marry more than once, and she explainshow she dominated and controlled each of her five husbands. Shemarried her fifth husband, Jankyn, for love instead of money. Afterthe Wife has rambled on for a while, the Friar butts in to complainthat she is taking too long, and the Summoner retorts that friarsare like flies, always meddling. The Friar promises to tell a taleabout a summoner, and the Summoner promises to tell a tale abouta friar. The Host cries for everyone to quiet down and allow theWife to commence her tale.

In her tale, a young knight of King Arthur’s court rapesa maiden; to atone for his crime, Arthur’s queen sends him on aquest to discover what women want most. An ugly old woman promisesthe knight that she will tell him the secret if he promises to dowhatever she wants for saving his life. He agrees, and she tellshim women want control of their husbands and their own lives. Theygo together to Arthur’s queen, and the old woman’s answer turnsout to be correct. The old woman then tells the knight that he mustmarry her. When the knight confesses later that he is repulsed byher appearance, she gives him a choice: she can either be ugly andfaithful, or beautiful and unfaithful. The knight tells her to makethe choice herself, and she rewards him for giving her control ofthe marriage by rendering herself both beautiful and faithful.

The Friar’s Prologue and Tale

The Friar speaks approvingly of the Wife of Bath’s Tale,and offers to lighten things up for the company by telling a funnystory about a lecherous summoner. The Summoner does not object,but he promises to pay the Friar back in his own tale. The Friartells of an archdeacon who carries out the law without mercy, especiallyto lechers. The archdeacon has a summoner who has a network of spiesworking for him, to let him know who has been lecherous. The summonerextorts money from those he’s sent to summon, charging them moremoney than he should for penance. He tries to serve a summons ona yeoman who is actually a devil in disguise. After comparing noteson their treachery and extortion, the devil vanishes, but when thesummoner tries to prosecute an old wealthy widow unfairly, the widowcries out that the summoner should be taken to hell. The devil followsthe woman’s instructions and drags the summoner off to hell.

The Summoner’s Prologue and Tale

The Summoner, furious at the Friar’s Tale, asks the companyto let him tell the next tale. First, he tells the company thatthere is little difference between friars and fiends, and that whenan angel took a friar down to hell to show him the torments there,the friar asked why there were no friars in hell; the angel thenpulled up Satan’s tail and 20,000 friarscame out of his ass.

In the Summoner’s Tale, a friar begs for money from adying man named Thomas and his wife, who have recently lost theirchild. The friar shamelessly exploits the couple’s misfortunes toextract money from them, so Thomas tells the friar that he is sittingon something that he will bequeath to the friars. The friar reachesfor his bequest, and Thomas lets out an enormous fart. The friarcomplains to the lord of the manor, whose squire promises to dividethe fart evenly among all the friars.

The Clerk’s Prologue and Tale

The Host asks the Clerk to cheer up and tell a merry tale,and the Clerk agrees to tell a tale by the Italian poet Petrarch.Griselde is a hardworking peasant who marries into the aristocracy.Her husband tests her fortitude in several ways, including pretendingto kill her children and divorcing her. He punishes herone final time by forcing her to prepare for his wedding to a newwife. She does all this dutifully, her husband tells her that shehas always been and will always be his wife (the divorce was a fraud),and they live happily ever after.

The Merchant’s Prologue, Tale, and Epilogue

The Merchant reflects on the great difference betweenthe patient Griselde of the Clerk’s Tale and the horrible shrewhe has been married to for the past two months. The Host asks himto tell a story of the evils of marriage, and he complies. Againstthe advice of his friends, an old knight named January marries May,a beautiful young woman. She is less than impressed by his enthusiasticsexual efforts, and conspires to cheat on him with his squire, Damien. Whenblind January takes May into his garden to copulate with her, shetells him she wants to eat a pear, and he helps her up into thepear tree, where she has sex with Damien. Pluto, the king of thefaeries, restores January’s sight, but May, caught in the act, assureshim that he must still be blind. The Host prays to God to keep himfrom marrying a wife like the one the Merchant describes.

The Squire’s Introduction and Tale

The Host calls upon the Squire to say something abouthis favorite subject, love, and the Squire willingly complies. KingCambyuskan of the Mongol Empire is visited on his birthday by aknight bearing gifts from the king of Arabia and India. He givesCambyuskan and his daughter Canacee a magic brass horse, a magicmirror, a magic ring that gives Canacee the ability to understandthe language of birds, and a sword with the power to cure any woundit creates. She rescues a dying female falcon that narrates howher consort abandoned her for the love of another. The Squire’sTale is either unfinished by Chaucer or is meant to be interruptedby the Franklin, who interjects that he wishes his own son wereas eloquent as the Squire. The Host expresses annoyance at the Franklin’sinterruption, and orders him to begin the next tale.

The Franklin’s Prologue and Tale

The Franklin says that his tale is a familiar Breton lay,a folk ballad of ancient Brittany. Dorigen, the heroine, awaitsthe return of her husband, Arveragus, who has gone to England towin honor in feats of arms. She worries that the ship bringing herhusband home will wreck itself on the coastal rocks, and she promisesAurelius, a young man who falls in love with her, that she willgive her body to him if he clears the rocks from the coast. Aureliushires a student learned in magic to create the illusion that therocks have disappeared. Arveragus returns home and tells his wifethat she must keep her promise to Aurelius. Aurelius is so impressedby Arveragus’s honorable act that he generously absolves her ofthe promise, and the magician, in turn, generously absolves Aureliusof the money he owes.

The Physician’s Tale

Appius the judge lusts after Virginia, the beautiful daughterof Virginius. Appius persuades a churl named Claudius to declareher his slave, stolen from him by Virginius. Appius declares thatVirginius must hand over his daughter to Claudius. Virginius tellshis daughter that she must die rather than suffer dishonor, andshe virtuously consents to her father’s cutting her head off. Appiussentences Virginius to death, but the Roman people, aware of Appius’shijinks, throw him into prison, where he kills himself.

The Pardoner’s Introduction, Prologue, and Tale

The Host is dismayed by the tragic injustice of the Physician’sTale, and asks the Pardoner to tell something merry. The other pilgrims contradictthe Host, demanding a moral tale, which the Pardoner agrees to tellafter he eats and drinks. The Pardoner tells the company how hecheats people out of their money by preaching that money is theroot of all evil. His tale describes three riotous youths who golooking for Death, thinking that they can kill him. An old man tellsthem that they will find Death under a tree. Instead, they findeight bushels of gold, which they plot to sneak into town under coverof darkness. The youngest goes into town to fetch food and drink,but brings back poison, hoping to have the gold all to himself. Hiscompanions kill him to enrich their own shares, then drink the poisonand die under the tree. His tale complete, the Pardoner offers tosell the pilgrims pardons, and singles out the Host to come kisshis relics. The Host infuriates the Pardoner by accusing him offraud, but the Knight persuades the two to kiss and bury their differences.

The Shipman’s Tale

The Shipman’s Tale features a monk who tricks a merchant’swife into having sex with him by borrowing money from the merchant, thengiving it to the wife so she can repay her own debt to her husband,in exchange for sexual favors. When the monk sees the merchant next,he tells him that he returned the merchant’s money to his wife.The wife realizes she has been duped, but she boldly tells her husbandto forgive her debt: she will repay it in bed. The Host praisesthe Shipman’s story, and asks the Prioress for a tale.

The Prioress’s Prologue and Tale

The Prioress calls on the Virgin Mary to guide her tale.In an Asian city, a Christian school is located at the edge of aJewish ghetto. An angelic seven-year-old boy, a widow’s son, attendsthe school. He is a devout Christian, and loves to sing AlmaRedemptoris (Gracious Mother of the Redeemer). Singingthe song on his way through the ghetto, some Jews hire a murdererto slit his throat and throw him into a latrine. The Jews refuseto tell the widow where her son is, but he miraculously begins tosing Alma Redemptoris, so the Christian peoplerecover his body, and the magistrate orders the murdering Jews tobe drawn apart by wild horses and then hanged.

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The Prologue and Tale of Sir Thopas

The Host, after teasing Chaucer the narrator about hisappearance, asks him to tell a tale. Chaucer says that he only knowsone tale, then launches into a parody of bad poetry—the Tale ofSir Thopas. Sir Thopas rides about looking for an elf-queen to marryuntil he is confronted by a giant. The narrator’s doggerel continuesin this vein until the Host can bear no more and interrupts him.Chaucer asks him why he can’t tell his tale, since it is the besthe knows, and the Host explains that his rhyme isn’t worth a turd.He encourages Chaucer to tell a prose tale. Monster slayers.

The Tale of Melibee

Chaucer’s second tale is the long, moral prose story ofMelibee. Melibee’s house is raided by his foes, who beat his wife,Prudence, and severely wound his daughter, Sophie, in her feet,hands, ears, nose, and mouth. Prudence advises him not to rashlypursue vengeance on his enemies, and he follows her advice, puttinghis foes’ punishment in her hands. She forgives them for the outragesdone to her, in a model of Christian forbearance and forgiveness.

The Monk’s Prologue and Tale

The Host wishes that his own wife were as patient as Melibee’s,and calls upon the Monk to tell the next tale. First he teases theMonk, pointing out that the Monk is clearly no poor cloisterer.The Monk takes it all in stride and tells a series of tragic falls,in which noble figures are brought low: Lucifer, Adam, Sampson,Hercules, Nebuchadnezzar, Belshazzar, Zenobia, Pedro of Castile,and down through the ages.

The Nun’s Priest’s Prologue, Tale, and Epilogue

After seventeen noble “falls” narrated by the Monk, theKnight interrupts, and the Host calls upon the Nun’s Priest to deliversomething more lively. The Nun’s Priest tells of Chanticleer theRooster, who is carried off by a flattering fox who tricks him intoclosing his eyes and displaying his crowing abilities. Chanticleerturns the tables on the fox by persuading him to open his mouthand brag to the barnyard about his feat, upon which Chanticleerfalls out of the fox’s mouth and escapes. The Host praises the Nun’sPriest’s Tale, adding that if the Nun’s Priest were not in holyorders, he would be as sexually potent as Chanticleer.

The Second Nun’s Prologue and Tale

In her Prologue, the Second Nun explains that she willtell a saint’s life, that of Saint Cecilia, for this saint set anexcellent example through her good works and wise teachings. Shefocuses particularly on the story of Saint Cecilia’s martyrdom.Before Cecilia’s new husband, Valerian, can take her virginity,she sends him on a pilgrimage to Pope Urban, who converts him toChristianity. An angel visits Valerian, who asks that his brotherTiburce be granted the grace of Christian conversion as well. Allthree—Cecilia, Tiburce, and Valerian—are put to death by the Romans.

The Canon’s Yeoman’s Prologue and Tale

When the Second Nun’s Tale is finished, the company isovertaken by a black-clad Canon and his Yeoman, who have heard ofthe pilgrims and their tales and wish to participate. The Yeomanbrags to the company about how he and the Canon createthe illusion that they are alchemists, and the Canon departs inshame at having his secrets discovered. The Yeoman tells a taleof how a canon defrauded a priest by creating the illusion of alchemyusing sleight of hand.

The Manciple’s Prologue and Tale

The Host pokes fun at the Cook, riding at the back ofthe company, blind drunk. The Cook is unable to honor the Host’srequest that he tell a tale, and the Manciple criticizes him forhis drunkenness. The Manciple relates the legend of a white crow,taken from the Roman poet Ovid’s Metamorphoses andone of the tales in The Arabian Nights. In it,Phoebus’s talking white crow informs him that his wife is cheatingon him. Phoebus kills the wife, pulls out the crow’s white feathers,and curses it with blackness.

The Parson’s Prologue and Tale

As the company enters a village in the late afternoon,the Host calls upon the Parson to give them a fable. Refusing totell a fictional story because it would go against the rule setby St. Paul, the Parson delivers a lengthy treatise on the SevenDeadly Sins, instead.

Chaucer’s Retraction

Chaucer appeals to readers to credit Jesus Christ as theinspiration for anything in his book that they like, and to attributewhat they don’t like to his own ignorance and lack of ability. Heretracts and prays for forgiveness for all of his works dealingwith secular and pagan subjects, asking only to be remembered forwhat he has written of saints’ lives and homilies.