The pilgrims agree, and Chaucer warns his readers that he
must repeat each tale exactly as he heard it, even though it might
contain frank language. The next morning the company sets out,
pausing at the Watering of St. Thomas, where all draw straws, and the
Knight is thus selected to tell the first tale.]
Until Chaucer wrote The Canterbury Tales he was known
primarily as a maker of poems of love -- dream visions of the sort
exemplified in The Parliament of Fowls and The Book of the
Duchess, narratives of doomed passion, such as Troilus and
Criseyde, and stories of women wronged by their lovers that he
tells in The Legend of Good Women. The General Prologue begins with the
description of Spring characteristic of dream visions of secular
love. Chaucer set the style for such works (for some imitations
click
here). His first
audience, hearing the opening lines of the General Prologue, may well
have thought they were about to hear another elegant poem on
aristocratic love. Indeed, the opening lines seem to echo the most
famous dream vision of the time, Le Roman de la rose, which
Chaucer translated into English as The Romaunt of the Rose,
one of his first surviving works: That it was May thus dremed me And the birds begin to sing: To make noyse and syngen blythe The General prologue begins with the same tone, even some of the
same details, but where the audience expects to hear that it is the
time for gay and amorous thoughts, they hear instead: Then longen folk to gon on pilgrimages. The focus changes from secular love to religion, to a
pilgrimage,
and the texture shifts from the elegant abstractions and allegorical
personages to a very real London in the fourteenth century, populated
by apparently real people, some of whom -- Harry Bailly, the host,
and Chaucer himself -- were well known to Chaucer's audience. These
characters, we learn, are going to tell one another stories to pass
the time on their way along the
Road to Canterbury and to the shrine of
Thomas á Becket
in Canterbury cathedral.
This initiates the
"framing narrative,", consisting of the "connecting links"
which hold the
groups of tales together, as the pilgrims
amuse themselves by telling stories "to shorten with our way"
(GP I.791).
The idea of writing a collection of stories for a specific
fictional audience was not new; it was common in the later Middle
Ages. It is worth looking at how some of the other collections of
tales begin, since they give some idea of the possibilties of which
Chaucer might have availed himself: John Gower's
Confessio Amantis is a
collection of tales, told by Genius, the Priest of Love, for the
instruction of an unsuccessful lover (Gower himself). The Book of the Knight of
Latour-Landry begins with an explanation of how the Knight wrote
the book with its illustrative stories for the instruction of his
daughters, The First Day of Boccacio's Decameron, which more closely resembles
The Canterbury Tales than the works of Gower or the Knight,
begins with a chilling description of the Plague
(Boccaccio,
First Day ), which provides the impetus for the journey in which
the tales are told. The Preface
defines an audience somewhat different from Chaucer's, as does the
Conclusion,
which includes a defense of broad speech and indecorous stories
somewhat similar to that which Chaucer offers in the General
Prologue. The Canterbury Tales has many speakers, rather than just
one (as in The Confessio Amantis and The Book of the Knight
of Latour-Landry), and it differs from Boccaccio's
Decameron, the closest analogue, in that the speakers are not
from a single social class (as are Boccaccio's elegant young
Florentines) but are drawn from a broad range of society, from the
noble knight to the drunken rascal of a Miller and the impoverished
Parson. Choosing a pilgrimage as the vehicle for the tales was a
brilliant move -- a pilgrimage was the one occasion in medieval
life when so wide a range of members of society could plausibly join
together on relatively equal terms. Chaucer's idea of a Canterbury Pilgrimage is thus very unusual
(there is an Italian analogue, the Novelle of Giovanni
Sercambi, in which Sercambi tells tales to amuse the pilgrims he
leads, but it probably postdates Chaucer; see p. 796 in The
Riverside Chaucer). And consequently it cannot easily be assiged
to any one literary genre. The somewhat processional nature of the
presentation makes it somewhat similar to the "Dance of Death." This
is more a genre of art than of literature (it consisted of paintings,
with explanatory verses; for an example click
here) . As the illustration shows, a strict hierarchy is observed:
Death comes first to the Pope, then to the Emperour, then to a
cardinal, then to a king, and so on down the ladder of social rank.
Chaucer explicitly points out that he does not observe the expected
decorum: Also, I prey yow to foryeve it me Jill Mann, in one of the best studies we have of The General
Prologue, Chaucer and Medieval Estates Satire; the Literature of
Social Classes and the General Prologue to the Canterbury Tales.
(Cambridge [Eng.] University Press, 1973) [PR 1868.P9 M3], shows the
influence on Chaucer of "Estates satire," a censorious survey of
society. It is a mode rather than a genre but well worth considering
in this matter. Also one might think about some of the problems raised by the
characters in the General Prologue; it is a collection of nonpareils,
each a master of his or her trade, but it is also a great gathering
of scoundrels. The rascals far outnumber the admirable figures.
Chaucer seems to admire them all, without regard to their moral
status. That has seemed a problem to many readers; a classic solution
is offered by E.T. Donaldson in his article
"Chaucer the Pilgrim," though Donaldson's
solution should be applied with caution. As time allows, students might want to look at some later
imitations of the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales: Lydgate's Prologue to the
Siege of Thebes, in which Lydgate (a much
younger contemporary of Chaucer) imagines a homeward journey in which
he tells the first tale. These works are interesting not only for themselves but for
evidence of how Chaucer's contemporaries (such as Lydgate) and early
admirers (such as the author of the Tale of Beryn) interpreted the
General Prologue and its characters. Their readings sometimes differ
surprisingly from ours.
[In April Geoffrey Chaucer at the Tabard Inn in
Southwerk, across the Thames from London, joins a group of pilgrims
on their way to the Shrine of Thomas à Becket in Canterbury.
He describes almost all of the nine and twenty pilgrims in this
company, each of whom practices a different trade (often
dishonestly). The Host of the Tabard, Harry Bailey, proposes that he
join them as a guide and that each of the pilgrims should tell tales
(two on the outward journey, two on the way back); whoever tells the
best tale will win a supper, at the other pilgrims' cost when they
return.
In time of love and jollite
That al thyng gynneth waxen gay
For there is neither busk nor hay
In May that it nyl shrouded ben,
And it with new leves wryen.
These greves eke recoveren grene,
That dry in wynter ben to sen,
And the erthe waxeth proude withal
For swete dewes that on it falle . . .
Than is blisful many sithe
The chelandre and popinjay
Then yonge folk entended ay
For to ben gay and amorous
Al have I nat set folk in her degree
Here in this tale, as they shold stonde.
My wit is short, ye may wel understonde.
The anonymous Prologue to the Tale of
Beryn likewise deals with the pilgrims once they have arrived at
Canterbury and narrates the Pardoner's unsuccessful courtship of the
barmaid.
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