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{{Short description|Story collection by Geoffrey Chaucer}} {{Other uses}} {{redirect|The Canterbury Pilgrims||The Canterbury Pilgrims (Dyson)|and|The Canterbury Pilgrims (De Koven)}} {{pp|small=yes}} {{Use British English|date=September 2013}} {{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}} {{Infobox book | italic title = <!--(see above)--> | name = The Canterbury Tales | image = Canterbury Tales characters around table — traced.svg | image_size = | caption = A [[woodcut]] from [[Richard Pynson]]'s 1491/1492 edition of ''The Canterbury Tales'' | author = [[Geoffrey Chaucer]] | audio_read_by = | title_orig = Tales of Caunterbury | orig_lang_code = enm | title_workings = | translator = | illustrator = | cover_artist = | country = [[Kingdom of England|England]] | language = [[Middle English]] | series = | release_number = | subject = | genre = | set_in = [[Kingdom of England]], 14th century | publisher = | publisher2 = | pub_date = {{Circa|1400}} (unfinished at Chaucer's death) | english_pub_date = | published = | media_type = | pages = | awards = | isbn = | isbn_note = | oclc = | dewey =821.1 | congress =PR1870 .A1 | preceded_by = | followed_by = | wikisource = The Canterbury Tales | notes = | exclude_cover = | website = }} '''''The Canterbury Tales''''' ({{langx|enm|Tales of Caunterbury}}){{refn|The name "Tales of Caunterbury" appears within the surviving texts of Chaucer's work. Its modern name first appeared as {{lang|enm|Canterbury talys}} in [[John Lydgate]]'s 1421–1422 prologue to the ''Siege of Thebes''.<ref>Carlson, David. "[http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/cr/summary/v038/38.3carlson.html The Chronology of Lydgate's Chaucer References]". ''The Chaucer Review'', Vol. 38, No. 3 (2004), pp. 246–54. Accessed 6 January 2014.</ref>}} is a collection of 24 stories written in [[Middle English]] by [[Geoffrey Chaucer]] between 1387 and 1400.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Canterbury-Tales| title = Encyclopedia Britannica| date = 5 July 2023}}</ref> The book presents the tales, which are mostly written in [[verse (poetry)|verse]], as part of a fictional storytelling contest held by a group of [[pilgrim]]s travelling together from [[London]] to [[Canterbury]] to visit the shrine of Saint [[Thomas Becket]] at [[Canterbury Cathedral]]. The ''Tales'' are widely regarded as Chaucer's ''[[Masterpiece|magnum opus]]''. They had a major effect upon [[English literature]] and may have been responsible for the popularisation of the English [[vernacular]] in mainstream literature, as opposed to [[French language|French]] or [[Latin]]. English had, however, been used as a literary language centuries before Chaucer's time, and several of Chaucer's contemporaries—[[John Gower]], [[William Langland]], [[the Gawain Poet]], and [[Julian of Norwich]]—also wrote major literary works in English. It is unclear to what extent Chaucer was seminal in this evolution of literary preference. ''The Canterbury Tales'' is generally thought to have been incomplete at the end of Chaucer's life. In the [[General Prologue]], some 30 pilgrims are introduced. According to the Prologue, Chaucer's intention was to write four stories from the perspective of each pilgrim, two each on the way to and from their ultimate destination, St. Thomas Becket's shrine (making for a total of about 120 stories). It is revered as one of the most important works in English literature. ==Text== The question of whether ''The Canterbury Tales'' is a finished work has not been answered to date. There are 84 manuscripts and four [[incunabula]] (printed before 1500) editions<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.mossercatalogue.net/| title = A Digital Catalogue of the Pre-1500 Manuscripts and Incunables of the Canterbury Tales Second Edition}}</ref> of the work, which is more than for any other vernacular English literary text with the exception of ''[[Prick of Conscience]]''. This comparison should not be taken as evidence of the ''Tales''' popularity in the century after Chaucer's death, because, according to Derek Pearsall, it is unfair considering that ''Prick of Conscience'' had all the benefit of the "preservation of a dogmatic religious subject-matter".<ref name="Pearsall, 8">Pearsall, 8.</ref> Fifty-five of these manuscripts are thought to have been originally complete, while 28 are so fragmentary that it is difficult to ascertain whether they were copied individually or as part of a set.<ref>Cooper, 6–7</ref> The ''Tales'' vary in both minor and major ways from manuscript to manuscript; many of the minor variations are due to copyists' errors, while it is suggested that in other cases Chaucer both added to his work and revised it as it was being copied and possibly as it was being distributed. There are no manuscripts of the ''Canterbury Tales'' surviving in Chaucer's own hand. The two earliest known manuscripts, which both appear to have been copied by the same scribe, are MS Peniarth 392 D (called "[[Hengwrt Chaucer|Hengwrt]]"), and the [[Ellesmere Chaucer|Ellesmere Manuscript]], a deluxe, illustrated manuscript. Until the 1940s, scholars tended to prefer the Ellesmere manuscript as closer to Chaucer's intentions; following [[John M. Manly]] and [[Edith Rickert]], scholars increasingly favoured Hengwrt.<ref name=":0">Edwards, A.S.G. "The Ellesmere manuscript: controversy, culture and the Canterbury Tales." ''Essays and Studies'', vol. 2010, annual 2010, pp. 59+. {{Gale|CA254401568}}</ref> The first version of ''The Canterbury Tales'' to be published in print was [[William Caxton]]'s 1476 edition. It was one of the first books to be printed by Caxton, the first person in England to print books using a [[printing press]]. Only 10 copies of this edition are known to exist, including one held by the [[British Library]] and one held by the [[Folger Shakespeare Library]]. The copyist of the Hengwrt and Ellesmere manuscripts has been identified as a [[scrivener]] named [[Adam Pinkhurst]]. Since a poem, apparently by Chaucer, identifies his scribe as a man named "Adam", this has led to the hypothesis that the scribe who copied these two important manuscripts worked with Chaucer and knew him personally.<ref>Linne R. Mooney (2006), "Chaucer's Scribe", ''Speculum'', '''81''' : 97–138.</ref> This identification has been the subject of much controversy in the field of Middle English palaeography, though it is widely accepted as plausible.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kerby-Fulton |first=Kathryn |date=2024-07-01 |title=Adam Pinkhurst and the Baffled Jury: Assessing Scribal Identifications within the Margin of Error |url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/730564 |journal=Speculum |language=en |volume=99 |issue=3 |pages=664–687 |doi=10.1086/730564 |issn=0038-7134}}</ref> ===Order=== {{Main|Order of The Canterbury Tales|List of The Canterbury Tales characters}} There is no consensus as to whether a complete version of the ''Tales'' exists, and also no consensus regarding Chaucer's intended order of the stories.<ref name = seven>Cooper, 7</ref><ref>Pearsall, 14–15.</ref> Textual and manuscript clues have been adduced to support the two most popular modern methods of ordering the tales. Some scholarly editions divide the ''Tales'' into ten "Fragments". The tales that make up a Fragment are closely related and contain internal indications of their order of presentation, usually with one character speaking to and then stepping aside for another character. However, between Fragments, the connection is less obvious. Consequently, there are several possible orders; the one most frequently seen in modern editions follows the numbering of the Fragments (ultimately based on the Ellesmere order).<ref name = seven/> Victorians frequently used the nine "Groups", which was the order used by [[Walter William Skeat]] whose edition ''Chaucer: Complete Works'' was used by Oxford University Press for most of the twentieth century, but this order is currently seldom followed.<ref name = seven/>{{why|date=May 2024}} {| class="wikitable sortable" ! Fragment ! Group ! class="unsortable" | Tales |- | <span style="display:none">01</span>Fragment I || A | [[General Prologue]] <br> [[The Knight's Tale]] <br> [[The Miller's Tale]] <br> [[The Reeve's Tale]] <br> [[The Cook's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">02</span>Fragment II || B<sup>1</sup> |[[The Man of Law's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">03</span>Fragment III || D |[[The Wife of Bath's Tale]]<br>[[The Friar's Tale]]<br>[[The Summoner's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">04</span>Fragment IV || E |[[The Clerk's Tale]]<br>[[The Merchant's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">05</span>Fragment V || F |[[The Squire's Tale]]<br>[[The Franklin's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">06</span>Fragment VI || C |[[The Physician's Tale]]<br>[[The Pardoner's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">07</span>Fragment VII || B<sup>2</sup> |[[The Shipman's Tale]]<br>[[The Prioress's Tale]]<br>[[Sir Thopas]] Tale<br>[[The Tale of Melibee]]<br>[[The Monk's Tale]]<br>[[The Nun's Priest's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">08</span>Fragment VIII || G |[[The Second Nun's Tale]]<br>[[The Canon's Yeoman's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">09</span>Fragment IX || H |[[The Manciple's Tale]] |- | <span style="display:none">10</span>Fragment X || I |[[The Parson's Tale]] |} An alternative ordering (seen in the early 15th-century manuscript [[Harley MS. 7334]]) places Fragment VIII before VI. Fragments I and II almost always follow each other, just as VI and VII, IX and X do in the oldest manuscripts. Fragments IV and V, by contrast, vary in location from manuscript to manuscript. ==Language== {{Listen | filename = Enm-Merchant Prologue.ogg | type = speech | title = The Merchant's Prologue | description = Recording in reconstructed Middle English pronunciation | pos = right }} Chaucer mainly wrote in a London dialect of late [[Middle English]], which has clear differences from Modern English. From philological research, some facts are known about the pronunciation of English during the time of Chaucer. Chaucer pronounced ''-e'' at the end of many words, so that ''care'' (except when followed by a vowel sound) was {{IPA|enm|ˈkaːrə|}}, not {{IPAc-en|k|ɛər}} as in Modern English. Other nowadays silent letters were also pronounced, so that the word ''knight'' was {{IPA|[kniçt]}}, with both the ''k'' and the ''gh'' pronounced, not {{IPAc-en|n|aɪ|t}}. In some cases, vowel letters in Middle English were pronounced very differently from Modern English, because the [[Great Vowel Shift]] had not yet happened. For instance, the long ''e'' in ''wepyng'' "weeping" was pronounced as {{IPA|enm|eː|}}, as in modern German or Italian, not as {{IPAc-en|iː}}. Below is an [[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]] transcription of the opening lines of ''The Merchant's Prologue'': {{clear|right}} <div class="notice spoilerbox"><div class="toccolours spoilercontents"> {{col-begin}} {{col-3}} :{{lang|enm|'Wepyng and waylyng, care and oother sorwe}} :{{lang|enm|I knowe ynogh, on even and a-morwe,'}} :{{lang|enm|Quod the Marchant, 'and so doon oother mo}} :{{lang|enm|That wedded been.'}}<ref>Text from ''The Riverside Chaucer'', ed. by Larry D. Benson, 3rd edn (Oxford: [[Oxford University Press]], 1987), p. 153.</ref> {{col-3}} :{{IPA|ˈweːpiŋɡ and ˈwailiŋɡ ‖ ˈkaːr‿and ˈoːðər ˈsɔrwə ‖}} :{{IPA|iː ˈknɔu iˈnoːx ‖ ɔn ˈɛːvən and aˈmɔrwə ‖}} :{{IPA|ˈkwɔd ðə ˈmartʃant ‖ and ˈsɔː ˈdoːn ˈoːðər ˈmɔː ‖}} :{{IPA|ðat ˈwɛddəd ˈbeːn ‖}}<ref>Based on the information in Norman Davies, "Language and Versification", in ''The Riverside Chaucer'', ed. by Larry D. Benson, 3rd edn (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987), pp. xxv–xli.</ref> {{col-3}} :'Weeping and wailing, care and other sorrow :I know enough, in the evening and in the morning,' :quoth the Merchant, 'and so do many others :who have been married.' {{col-end}} </div></div> No manuscript exists in Chaucer's own hand; all extant copies were made by scribes. Because the final ''-e'' sound was lost soon after Chaucer's time, scribes did not accurately copy it, and this gave scholars the impression that Chaucer himself was inconsistent in using it.<ref>e.g. Ian Robinson, ''Chaucer's Prosody: A Study of the Middle English Verse Tradition'' (London: [[Cambridge University Press]], 1971).</ref> It has now been established, however, that ''-e'' was an important part of Chaucer's grammar, and helped to distinguish singular adjectives from plural and subjunctive verbs from indicative.<ref>See M. L. Samuels, "Chaucerian Final '-e{{'"}}, ''Notes and Queries'', 19 (1972), 445–48, and D. Burnley, "Inflection in Chaucer's Adjectives", ''Neuphilologische Mitteilungen'', 83 (1982), 169–77.</ref> ==Sources== [[File:Waterhouse decameron.jpg|thumb|''A Tale from the Decameron'' by [[John William Waterhouse]]]] No other work prior to Chaucer's is known to have set a collection of tales within the framework of pilgrims on a pilgrimage. It is obvious, however, that Chaucer borrowed portions, sometimes very large portions, of his stories from earlier stories, and that his work was influenced by the general state of the literary world in which he lived. Storytelling was the main entertainment in England at the time, and storytelling contests had been around for hundreds of years. In 14th-century England, the English [[Pui (society)|Pui]] was a group with an appointed leader who would judge the songs of the group. The winner received a crown and, as with the winner of ''The Canterbury Tales'', a free dinner. It was common for pilgrims on a pilgrimage to have a chosen "master of ceremonies" to guide them and organise the journey.<ref>Cooper, p. 10.</ref> [[Harold Bloom]] suggests that the structure is mostly original, but inspired by the "pilgrim" figures of Dante and Virgil in ''[[Divine Comedy|The Divine Comedy]]''.<ref name="Harold Bloom">{{cite news|last=Bloom|first=Harold|title=Road Trip|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/15/books/review/Bloom-t.html?_r=0|access-date=9 September 2013|newspaper=The New York Times|date=11 November 2009}}</ref> New research suggests that the General Prologue, in which the innkeeper and host Harry Bailey introduces each pilgrim, is a pastiche of the historical Harry Bailey's surviving 1381 poll-tax account of Southwark's inhabitants.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Sobecki|first1=Sebastian|title=A Southwark Tale: Gower, the 1381 Poll Tax, and Chaucer's ''The Canterbury Tales''|journal=Speculum|date=2017|volume=92|issue=3|pages=630–60|doi=10.1086/692620|s2cid=159994357|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/portal/files/44079043/692620.pdf}}</ref> ''The Canterbury Tales'' contains more parallels to the ''[[Decameron]]'', by [[Giovanni Boccaccio]], than any other work. Like the ''Tales'', the ''Decameron'' features a frame tale in which several different narrators tell a series of stories. In the ''Decameron'', the characters have fled to the countryside to escape [[the Black Death]]. It ends with an apology by Boccaccio, much like [[Chaucer's Retraction]] to the ''Tales''. A quarter of the tales in ''The Canterbury Tales'' parallel a tale in the ''Decameron'', although most of them have closer parallels in other stories. Some scholars thus find it unlikely that Chaucer had a copy of the work on hand, surmising instead that he may have merely read the ''Decameron'' at some point.<ref>Cooper, pp. 10–11.</ref> Chaucer may have read the ''Decameron'' during his first diplomatic mission to [[Italy in the Middle Ages|Italy]] in 1372.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}} Chaucer used a wide variety of sources, but some, in particular, were used frequently over several tales, among them the Bible, Classical poetry by [[Ovid]], and the works of contemporary Italian writers [[Petrarch]] and [[Dante]]. Chaucer was the first author to use the work of these last two.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}} [[Boethius]]' ''[[Consolation of Philosophy]]'' appears in several tales, as do the works of [[John Gower]], a friend of Chaucer's. Chaucer also seems to have borrowed from numerous religious encyclopaedias and liturgical writings, such as [[John Bromyard]]'s ''[[Summa praedicantium]]'', a preacher's handbook, and [[Jerome]]'s ''[[Against Jovinianus|Adversus Jovinianum]]''.<ref>Cooper, pp. 12–16.</ref> Many scholars say there is a good possibility [[Chaucer coming in contact with Petrarch or Boccaccio|Chaucer met Petrarch or Boccaccio]].<ref name="Brewer227">Brewer, p. 227. "Although Chaucer undoubtedly studied the works of these celebrated writers, and particularly of Dante before this fortunate interview; yet it seems likely, that these excursions gave him a new relish for their compositions, and enlarged his knowledge of the Italian fables."</ref><ref name="Brewer277">Brewer, p. 277."...where he became thoroughly inbued with the spirit and excellence of the great Italian poets and prose-writers: Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio; and is said to have had a personal contact interview with one of these, Petrarch."</ref><ref name="Hendrickson183-192">Hendrickson, pp. 183–92. Professor G. L. Hendrickson of the University of Chicago gives a detailed analysis as to Chaucer coming in contact with Petrarch.</ref><ref>Rearden, p. 458. "There can be no moral doubt but that Chaucer knew Petrarch personally. They were both in France many times, where they might have met. They were both courtiers. They both had an enthusiasm for scholarship. Whether they met then, or whether Chaucer, when on his visit to Genoa, specially visited the Italian, it does not appear." "...but the only reason that such a visit could not have occurred lies in the fact that Petrarch himself does not record it. Still, on the other hand, would he have mentioned the visit of a man who was the servant of a barbarous monarch, and whose only claim to notice, literary-wise, was his cultivation of an unknown and uncouth dialect that was half bastard French?"</ref><ref>Skeat (1874), p. xxx. "And we know that Petrarch, on his own shewing, was so pleased with the story of Griselda that he learnt it by heart as well as he could, for the express purpose of repeating it to friends, before the idea of turning it into Latin occurred to him. Whence we may conclude that Chaucer and Petrarch met at Padua early in 1373; that Petrarch told Chaucer the story by word of mouth, either in Italian or French; and that Chaucer shortly after obtained a copy of Petrarch's Latin version, which he kept constantly before him whilst making his own translation."</ref> ==Genre and structure== [[File:Canterbury-Cathedral-Church-of-England-1890-1900.jpg|thumb|[[Canterbury Cathedral]] from the north west [[Wiktionary:circa|c.]] 1890–1900 (retouched from a black & white photograph)]] ''The Canterbury Tales'' is a collection of stories built around a [[frame tale]], a common and already long established genre in this period. Chaucer's ''Tales'' differs from most other story "collections" in this genre chiefly in its intense variation. Most story collections focused on a theme, usually a religious one. Even in the ''Decameron'', storytellers are encouraged to stick to the theme decided on for the day. The idea of a [[pilgrimage]] to get such a diverse collection of people together for literary purposes was also unprecedented, though "the association of pilgrims and storytelling was a familiar one".<ref>"Sources and Analogues of the Canterbury Tales", 2002, p. 22.</ref> Introducing a competition among the tales encourages the reader to compare the tales in all their variety, and allows Chaucer to showcase the breadth of his skill in different genres and literary forms.<ref>Cooper, 8–9.</ref> While the structure of the ''Tales'' is largely linear, with one story following another, it is also much more than that. In the ''General Prologue'', Chaucer describes not the tales to be told, but the people who will tell them, making it clear that structure will depend on the characters rather than a general theme or moral. This idea is reinforced when the Miller interrupts to tell his tale after the Knight has finished his. Having the Knight go first gives one the idea that all will tell their stories by class, with the Monk following the Knight. However, the Miller's interruption makes it clear that this structure will be abandoned in favour of a free and open exchange of stories among all classes present. General themes and points of view arise as the characters tell their tales, which are responded to by other characters in their own tales, sometimes after a long lapse in which the theme has not been addressed.<ref>Cooper, 17–18.</ref> Lastly, Chaucer does not pay much attention to the progress of the trip, to the time passing as the pilgrims travel, or to specific locations along the way to Canterbury. His writing of the story seems focused primarily on the stories being told, and not on the pilgrimage itself.<ref>Cooper, 18.</ref> ==Style== [[File:Hengwrt Chaucer (f.2.r) title page.jpg|thumb|Title page of Geoffrey Chaucer's ''Canterbury Tales'' in the hand of "Scribe B", identified as [[Adam Pinkhurst]], {{circa|1400}}.]] The variety of Chaucer's tales shows the breadth of his skill and his familiarity with many literary forms, linguistic styles, and rhetorical devices. Medieval schools of rhetoric at the time encouraged such diversity, dividing literature (as [[Virgil]] suggests) into high, middle, and low styles as measured by the density of rhetorical forms and vocabulary. Another popular method of division came from [[St. Augustine]], who focused more on audience response and less on subject matter (a Virgilian concern). Augustine divided literature into "majestic persuades", "temperate pleases", and "subdued teaches". Writers were encouraged to write in a way that kept in mind the speaker, subject, audience, purpose, manner, and occasion. Chaucer moves freely between all of these styles, showing favouritism to none.<ref name="empathy article">{{Cite web|url=http://thegemsbok.com/art-reviews-and-articles/tuesday-tome-canterbury-tales-geoffrey-chaucer/|title=Puppetry and the "Popet:" Fiction, Reality, and Empathy in Geoffrey Chaucer's ''Canterbury Tales''|last=Podgorski|first=Daniel|date=29 December 2015|website=The Gemsbok|access-date=17 March 2016}}</ref> He not only considers the readers of his work as an audience, but the other pilgrims within the story as well, creating a multi-layered rhetoric.<ref>Cooper, 22–24.</ref> With this, Chaucer avoids targeting any specific audience or social class of readers, focusing instead on the characters of the story and writing their tales with a skill proportional to their social status and learning. However, even the lowest characters, such as the Miller, show surprising rhetorical ability, although their subject matter is more lowbrow. Vocabulary also plays an important part, as those of the higher classes refer to a woman as a "lady", while the lower classes use the word "wenche", with no exceptions. At times the same word will mean entirely different things between classes. The word "pitee", for example, is a noble concept to the upper classes, while in the ''Merchant's Tale'' it refers to sexual intercourse. Again, however, tales such as the ''Nun's Priest's Tale'' show surprising skill with words among the lower classes of the group, while the ''Knight's Tale'' is at times extremely simple.<ref>Cooper, 24–25.</ref> Chaucer uses the same meter throughout almost all of his tales, with the exception of ''Sir Thopas'' and his prose tales. This is a line characterised by five stressed syllables, usually alternating with unstressed syllables to produce lines usually of [[Decasyllable|ten syllables]], but often eleven and occasionally nine; occasionally a [[caesura]] can be identified around the middle of a line. This metre was probably inspired by French and Italian forms. Chaucer's meter would later develop into the heroic meter of the 15th and 16th centuries sometimes known as [[riding rhyme]], and is an ancestor of [[iambic pentameter]]. Chaucer's verse is usually also characterised by [[Couplet|couplet rhyme]], but he avoided allowing couplets to become too prominent in ''The Canterbury Tales'', and four of the tales (the Man of Law's, Clerk's, Prioress', and Second Nun's) use [[rhyme royal]].<ref>Cooper, 25–26.</ref><ref>Norman Davies, 'Language and Versification', in ''The Riverside Chaucer'', ed. by Larry D. Benson, 3rd edn (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987), pp. xxv-xli (pp. xxxix-xl).</ref> ==Historical context and themes== [[File:DeathWatTylerFull.jpg|thumb|left|The [[Peasants' Revolt]] of 1381 is mentioned in the ''Tales''.]] In 1386, Chaucer became Controller of Customs and Justice of the Peace and, in 1389, Clerk of the King's Works.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Prestwich |first=Michael |url=https://archive.org/details/medievalpeoplevi0000pres/mode/2up |title=Medieval People: Vivid Lives in a Distant Landscape |publisher=Thames & Hudson |year=2014 |isbn=978-0500252031 |location=London |pages=4. An Age of Plague 1300–1400 |url-access=registration}}</ref> It was during these years that Chaucer began working on ''The Canterbury Tales''. The end of the fourteenth century was a turbulent time in English history. The Catholic Church was in the midst of the [[Western Schism]] and, although it was still the only Christian authority in Western Europe, it was the subject of heavy controversy. [[Lollardy]], an early English religious movement led by [[John Wycliffe]], is mentioned in the ''Tales'', which also mention a specific incident involving pardoners (sellers of [[indulgences]], which were believed to relieve the temporal punishment due for sins that were already forgiven in the [[Sacrament of Confession]]) who nefariously claimed to be collecting for [[St. Mary Rouncesval]] hospital in England. ''The Canterbury Tales'' is among the first English literary works to mention paper, a relatively new invention that allowed dissemination of the written word never before seen in England. Political clashes, such as the [[Peasants' Revolt|1381 Peasants' Revolt]] and clashes ending in the deposing of King [[Richard II of England|Richard II]], further reveal the complex turmoil surrounding Chaucer in the time of the ''Tales''' writing. Many of his close friends were executed and he himself moved to [[Kent]] to get away from events in London.<ref>Cooper, 5–6.</ref> While some readers look to interpret the characters of ''The Canterbury Tales'' as historical figures, other readers choose to interpret its significance in less literal terms. After analysis of Chaucer's diction and historical context, his work appears to develop a critique of society during his lifetime. Within a number of his descriptions, his comments can appear complimentary in nature, but through clever language, the statements are ultimately critical of the pilgrim's actions. It is unclear whether Chaucer would intend for the reader to link his characters with actual persons. Instead, it appears that Chaucer creates fictional characters to be general representations of people in such fields of work. With an understanding of medieval society, one can detect subtle satire at work.<ref>Donald R. Howard, ''Chaucer and the Medieval World'' (London, 1987), pp. 410–17.</ref> ===Religion=== The ''Tales'' reflect diverse views of the Church in Chaucer's England. After the [[Black Death]], many Europeans began to question the authority of the established Church. Some turned to Lollardy, while others chose less extreme paths, starting new monastic orders or smaller movements exposing church corruption in the behaviour of the clergy, false [[relic|church relics]] or abuse of [[indulgences]].<ref>Bisson, pp. 49–51, 56–62.</ref> Several characters in the ''Tales'' are religious figures, and the very setting of the pilgrimage to Canterbury is religious (although the prologue comments ironically on its merely seasonal attractions), making religion a significant theme of the work.<ref>Bisson, p. 50.</ref> Two characters, the Pardoner and the Summoner, whose roles apply the Church's secular power, are both portrayed as deeply corrupt, greedy, and abusive. Pardoners in Chaucer's day were those people from whom one bought Church "indulgences" for forgiveness of sins, who were guilty of abusing their office for their own gain. Chaucer's Pardoner openly admits the corruption of his practice while hawking his wares.<ref>Bisson, pp. 61–64.</ref> Summoners were Church officers who brought sinners to the Church court for possible excommunication and other penalties. Corrupt summoners would write false citations and frighten people into bribing them to protect their interests. Chaucer's Summoner is portrayed as guilty of the very kinds of sins for which he is threatening to bring others to court, and is hinted as having a corrupt relationship with the Pardoner.<ref>Bisson, pp. 66–67.</ref> In [[The Friar's Tale]], one of the characters is a summoner who is shown to be working on the side of the devil, not God.<ref>Bisson, pp. 67–68.</ref> [[File:Thomas Becket Murder.JPG|thumb|The murder of [[Thomas Becket]]]] Churchmen of various kinds are represented by the Monk, the Prioress, the Nun's Priest, and the Second Nun. Monastic orders, which originated from a desire to follow an ascetic lifestyle separated from the world, had by Chaucer's time become increasingly entangled in worldly matters. Monasteries frequently controlled huge tracts of land on which they made significant sums of money, while peasants worked in their employ.<ref>Bisson, pp. 73–75, 81.</ref> The Second Nun is an example of what a Nun was expected to be: her tale is about a woman whose chaste example brings people into the church. The Monk and the Prioress, on the other hand, while not as corrupt as the Summoner or Pardoner, fall far short of the ideal for their orders. Both are expensively dressed, show signs of lives of luxury and flirtatiousness and show a lack of spiritual depth.<ref>Bisson, pp. 91–95.</ref> [[The Prioress's Tale]] is an account of Jews murdering a deeply pious and innocent Christian boy, a [[blood libel against Jews]] that became a part of English literary tradition.<ref>Rubin, 106–07.</ref> The story did not originate in the works of Chaucer and was well known in the 14th century.<ref>[http://www.unc.edu/depts/chaucer/zatta/prioress.html "The Prioress's Tale"], by Prof. Jane Zatta.</ref> Pilgrimage was a very prominent feature of medieval society. The ultimate pilgrimage destination was Jerusalem,<ref>Bisson, pp. 99–02.</ref> but within England Canterbury was a popular destination. Pilgrims would journey to cathedrals that preserved relics of saints, believing that such relics held miraculous powers. [[Thomas Becket|Saint Thomas Becket]], Archbishop of Canterbury, had been murdered in [[Canterbury Cathedral]] by knights of [[Henry II of England|Henry II]] during a disagreement between Church and Crown. Miracle stories connected to his remains sprang up soon after his death, and the cathedral became a popular pilgrimage destination.<ref>Bisson, pp. 110–13.</ref> The pilgrimage in the work ties all of the stories together and may be considered a representation of Christians' striving for heaven, despite weaknesses, disagreement, and diversity of opinion.<ref>Bisson, pp. 117–19.</ref> ===Social class and convention=== [[File:Bors and Lionel.jpg|thumb|left|[[Bors]]' Dilemma – he chooses to save a maiden rather than his brother [[Sir Lionel|Lionel]]]] The upper class or nobility, represented chiefly by the Knight and his Squire, was in Chaucer's time steeped in a culture of chivalry and courtliness. Nobles were expected to be powerful warriors who could be ruthless on the battlefield yet mannerly in the King's Court and Christian in their actions.<ref>Bisson, pp. 123–31.</ref> Knights were expected to form a strong social bond with the men who fought alongside them, but an even stronger bond with a woman whom they idealised to strengthen their fighting ability.<ref>Bisson, pp. 132–34.</ref> Though the aim of chivalry was to noble action, its conflicting values often degenerated into violence. Church leaders frequently tried to place restrictions on jousts and tournaments, which at times ended in the death of the loser. [[The Knight's Tale]] shows how the brotherly love of two fellow knights turns into a deadly feud at the sight of a woman whom both idealise. To win her, both are willing to fight to the death. Chivalry was on the decline in Chaucer's day, and it is possible that The Knight's Tale was intended to show its flaws, although this is disputed.<ref>Bisson, pp. 139–42.</ref> Chaucer himself had fought in the [[Hundred Years' War]] under [[Edward III]], who heavily emphasised chivalry during his reign.<ref>Bisson, p. 138.</ref> Two tales, ''[[Sir Topas]]'' and ''[[The Tale of Melibee]]'', are told by Chaucer himself, who is travelling with the pilgrims in his own story. Both tales seem to focus on the ill-effects of chivalry—the first making fun of chivalric rules and the second warning against violence.<ref>Bisson, pp. 141–42.</ref> The ''Tales'' constantly reflect the conflict between classes. For example, the division of [[Estates of the realm|the three estates]]: the characters are all divided into three distinct classes, the classes being "those who pray" (the clergy), "those who fight" (the nobility), and "those who work" (the commoners and peasantry).<ref>Bisson, p. 143.</ref> Most of the tales are interlinked by common themes, and some "quit" (reply to or retaliate against) other tales. Convention is followed when the Knight begins the game with a tale, as he represents the highest social class in the group. But when he is followed by the Miller, who represents a lower class, it sets the stage for the ''Tales'' to reflect both a respect for and a disregard for upper class rules. Helen Cooper, as well as Mikhail Bakhtin and Derek Brewer, call this opposition "the ordered and the grotesque, [[Lent]] and [[Carnival]], officially approved culture and its riotous, and high-spirited underside."<ref name=opp>Cooper, 19</ref> Several works of the time contained the same opposition.<ref name=opp/> ===Relativism versus realism=== Chaucer's characters each express different—sometimes vastly different—views of reality, creating an atmosphere of testing, [[empathy]], and [[relativism]].<ref name="empathy article" /> As [[Helen Cooper (professor)|Helen Cooper]] says, "Different genres give different readings of the world: the [[fabliau]] scarcely notices the operations of God, the saint's life focuses on those at the expense of physical reality, tracts and sermons insist on prudential or orthodox morality, romances privilege human emotion." The sheer number of varying persons and stories renders the ''Tales'' as a set unable to arrive at any definite truth or reality.<ref>Cooper, 21.</ref> ===Liminality=== The concept of [[liminality]] figures prominently within ''The Canterbury Tales''.<ref name="empathy article" /> A liminal space, which can be both geographical as well as metaphorical or spiritual, is the transitional or transformational space between a "real" (secure, known, limited) world and an unknown or imaginary space of both risk and possibility.<ref>Bishop, Norma J. "Liminal Space in Travellers' Tales: Historical and Fictional Passages (Folklore, Ritual, History)". Order No. 8615152 The Pennsylvania State University, 1986. Ann Arbor: ProQuest. Web. 30 September 2015.</ref> The notion of a pilgrimage is itself a liminal experience, because it centres on travel between destinations and because pilgrims undertake it hoping to become more holy in the process. Thus, the structure of ''The Canterbury Tales'' itself is liminal; it not only covers the distance between London and Canterbury, but the majority of the tales refer to places entirely outside the geography of the pilgrimage. Jean Jost summarises the function of liminality in ''The Canterbury Tales'', {{Blockquote |Both appropriately and ironically in this raucous and subversive liminal space, a ragtag assembly gather together and tell their equally unconventional tales. In this unruly place, the rules of tale telling are established, themselves to be both disordered and broken; here the tales of game and earnest, solas and sentence, will be set and interrupted. Here the sacred and profane adventure begins, but does not end. Here, the condition of peril is as prominent as that of protection. The act of pilgrimaging itself consists of moving from one urban space, through liminal rural space, to the next urban space with an ever fluctuating series of events and narratives punctuating those spaces. The goal of pilgrimage may well be a religious or spiritual space at its conclusion, and reflect a psychological progression of the spirit, in yet another kind of emotional space.<ref>Jost, Jean. "Urban and Liminal Space in Chaucer's Knight's Tale: Perilous or Protective?" Albrecht Classen, ed. ''Fundamentals of Medieval and Early Modern Culture: Urban Space in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age''. Berlin, DEU: Walter de Gruyter, 2009. Print.</ref>}} Liminality is also evident in the individual tales. An obvious instance of this is [[The Friar's Tale]] in which the yeoman devil is a liminal figure because of his transitory nature and function; it is his purpose to issue souls from their current existence to hell, an entirely different one.<ref>Bloomfield, Morton W. "The 'Friar's Tale' as a Liminal Tale". ''The Chaucer Review'' 17.4 (1983): 286–91. Print.</ref> The [[The Franklin's Tale|Franklin's Tale]] is a [[Breton lai|Breton Lai]] tale, which takes the tale into a liminal space by invoking not only the interaction of the supernatural and the mortal, but also the relation between the present and the imagined past.<ref>Nowlin, Steele. "Between Precedent and Possibility: Liminality, Historicity, and Narrative in Chaucer's 'The Franklin's Tale{{'"}}. ''Studies in Philology'' 103.1 (2006): 47–67. Print.</ref> ==Reception== {{multiple image | align = right | total_width = 440 | image1 = Ellesmere Chaucer, mssEL 26 C 9, folio 153v color enhanced.jpg | caption1 = Chaucer as a pilgrim from the [[Ellesmere manuscript]] | image2 = Wife-of-Bath-ms.jpg | caption2 = Prologue of [[The Wife of Bath's Tale]] from the Ellesmere Manuscript }} While Chaucer clearly states the addressees of many of his poems (the ''[[Book of the Duchess]]'' is believed to have been written for [[John of Gaunt]] on the occasion of his wife's death in 1368), the intended audience of ''The Canterbury Tales'' is more difficult to determine. Chaucer was a [[courtier]], leading some to believe that he was mainly a [[court poet]] who wrote exclusively for the nobility. He is referred to as a noble translator and poet by [[Eustache Deschamps]] and by his contemporary John Gower. It has been suggested that the poem was intended to be read aloud, which is probable as this was a common activity at the time. However, it also seems to have been intended for private reading, since Chaucer frequently refers to himself as the writer, rather than the speaker, of the work. Determining the intended audience directly from the text is even more difficult, since the audience is part of the story. This makes it difficult to tell when Chaucer is writing to the fictional pilgrim audience or the actual reader.<ref>Pearsall, 294–95.</ref> Chaucer's works may have been distributed in some form during his lifetime in part or in whole. Scholars speculate that manuscripts were circulated among his friends, but likely remained unknown to most people until after his death. However, the speed with which copyists strove to write complete versions of his tale in manuscript form shows that Chaucer was a famous and respected poet in his own day. The Hengwrt and Ellesmere manuscripts are examples of the care taken to distribute the work. More manuscript copies of the poem exist than for any other poem of its day except ''[[The Prick of Conscience]]'', causing some scholars to give it the medieval equivalent of bestseller status. Even the most elegant of the illustrated manuscripts, however, is not nearly as highly decorated as the work of authors of more respectable works such as [[John Lydgate]]'s religious and historical literature.<ref>Pearsall, 295–97.</ref> ===15th century=== [[John Lydgate]] and [[Thomas Occleve]] were among the first critics of Chaucer's ''Tales'', praising the poet as the greatest English poet of all time and the first to show what the language was truly capable of poetically. This sentiment was universally agreed upon by later critics into the mid-15th century. Glosses included in ''The Canterbury Tales'' manuscripts of the time praised him highly for his skill with "sentence" and rhetoric, the two pillars by which medieval critics judged poetry. The most respected of the tales was at this time the Knight's, as it was full of both.<ref>Pearsall, 298–302.</ref> ==Literary additions and supplements== {{image frame |content=[[File:Canterbury Tales, William Caxton edition.jpg|230px]] |caption=''[[Canterbury Tales]]'', [[William Caxton]] edition}} The incompleteness of the ''Tales'' led several medieval authors to write additions and supplements to the tales to make them more complete. Some of the oldest existing manuscripts of the tales include new or modified tales, showing that even early on, such additions were being created. These emendations included various expansions of the ''Cook's Tale'', which Chaucer never finished, ''[[The Plowman's Tale]]'', ''[[The Tale of Gamelyn]]'', the ''[[Siege of Thebes (Lydgate)|Siege of Thebes]]'', and the ''[[Tale of Beryn]]''.<ref>Trigg, Stephanie, ''Congenial Souls: Reading Chaucer from Medieval to Postmodern'', Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002, p. 86. {{ISBN|0-8166-3823-3}}.</ref> The ''Tale of Beryn'', written by an anonymous author in the 15th century, is preceded by a lengthy prologue in which the pilgrims arrive at Canterbury and their activities there are described. While the rest of the pilgrims disperse throughout the town, the Pardoner seeks the affections of Kate the barmaid, but faces problems dealing with the man in her life and the innkeeper Harry Bailey. As the pilgrims turn back home, the Merchant restarts the storytelling with ''Tale of Beryn''. In this tale, a young man named Beryn travels from Rome to Egypt to seek his fortune only to be cheated by other businessmen there. He is then aided by a local man in getting his revenge. The tale comes from the French tale ''[[Bérinus]]'' and exists in a single early manuscript of the tales, although it was printed along with the tales in a 1721 edition by [[John Urry (literary editor)|John Urry]].<ref>Trigg, pp. 86–88, 97.</ref> John Lydgate wrote ''The Siege of Thebes'' in about 1420. Like the ''Tale of Beryn'', it is preceded by a prologue in which the pilgrims arrive in Canterbury. Lydgate places himself among the pilgrims as one of them and describes how he was a part of Chaucer's trip and heard the stories. He characterises himself as a monk and tells a long story about the history of Thebes before the events of the ''Knight's Tale''. John Lydgate's tale was popular early on and exists in old manuscripts both on its own and as part of the ''Tales''. It was first printed as early as 1561 by [[John Stow]], and several editions for centuries after followed suit.<ref>Trigg, pp. 88–97.</ref> There are actually two versions of ''[[The Plowman's Tale]]'', both of which are influenced by the story ''[[Piers Plowman]]'', a work written during Chaucer's lifetime. Chaucer describes a Plowman in the ''General Prologue'' of his tales, but never gives him his own tale. One tale, written by [[Thomas Occleve]], describes the miracle of the Virgin and the Sleeveless Garment. Another tale features a pelican and a griffin debating church corruption, with the pelican taking a position of protest akin to [[John Wycliffe]]'s ideas.<ref>Brewer, Charlotte, ''Editing Piers Plowman: The Evolution of the Text'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996, pp. 8–9. {{ISBN|0-521-34250-3}}.</ref> ''The Tale of Gamelyn'' was included in an early manuscript version of the tales, Harley 7334, which is notorious for being one of the lower-quality early manuscripts in terms of editor error and alteration. It is now widely rejected by scholars as an authentic Chaucerian tale, although some scholars think he may have intended to rewrite the story as a tale for the Yeoman. Dates for its authorship vary from 1340 to 1370.<ref>Ohlgren, Thomas, ''Medieval Outlaws'', Parlor Press, 2005, pp. 264–65. {{ISBN|1-932559-62-0}}.</ref> ==Later adaptations and homages== ===Books=== * The most well-known work of the 18th century writer [[Harriet Lee (writer)|Harriet Lee]] was called ''The Canterbury Tales'', and consists of twelve stories, related by travellers thrown together by untoward accident. In turn, Lee's version had a profound influence on [[Lord Byron]]. * [[E. Nesbit]]'s 1901 book ''[[The Wouldbegoods]]'' includes an episode where the children protagonists re-enact the pilgrimage, taking on some of the character roles. * [[Henry Dudeney]]'s 1907 book ''[[The Canterbury Puzzles]]'' contains a part reputedly lost from what modern readers know as Chaucer's tales. * Historical-mystery novelist [[P.C. Doherty]] wrote a series of novels based on ''The Canterbury Tales'', making use of both the story frame and Chaucer's characters. * Science-fiction writer [[Dan Simmons]] wrote his [[Hugo Award]] winning 1989 novel ''[[Hyperion (Simmons novel)|Hyperion]]'' based on an extra-planetary group of pilgrims. * Evolutionary biologist [[Richard Dawkins]] used ''The Canterbury Tales'' as a structure for his 2004 non-fiction book about [[evolution]] titled ''[[The Ancestor's Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution]]''. His animal pilgrims are on their way to find the common ancestor, each telling a tale about evolution. * Canadian author [[Angie Abdou]] translates ''The Canterbury Tales'' to a cross section of people, all snow-sports enthusiasts but from different social backgrounds, converging on a remote back-country ski cabin in British Columbia in the 2011 novel ''The Canterbury Trail''. * British poet and performer [[Patience Agbabi]] is one of fourteen authors who worked together to tell the stories and experiences of refugees, detainees, and asylum seekers in a book titled [https://www.refugeetales.org/books Refugee Tales]. The collaborative efforts of the writers and displaced people create stories modeled after Chaucer's tale of journey in The Canterbury Tales. This project is rooted in the efforts of the [https://www.gdwg.org.uk Gatwick Detainees Welfare Group], a non-partisan advocacy group for detained people. ===Stage adaptations=== * ''[[The Two Noble Kinsmen]]'', by William Shakespeare and John Fletcher, a retelling of "The Knight's Tale", was first performed in 1613 or 1614 and published in 1634. * In 1961, [[Erik Chisholm]] completed his opera, ''The Canterbury Tales''. The opera is in three acts: The Wyf of Bath's Tale, The Pardoner's Tale and The Nun's Priest's Tale. * [[Nevill Coghill]]'s modern English version formed the basis of a musical [[Canterbury Tales (musical)|version]] that was first staged in 1964. * In 2021, [[Zadie Smith]] debuted her first play, ''The Wife of Willesden,'' adapting the [[The Wife of Bath's Tale|Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale]] as told at a contemporary bar crawl, with the tale set in 17th century Jamaica. The work was originally performed in London<ref>{{Cite news |last=Ibekwe |first=Desiree |date=2021-11-11 |title=Zadie Smith's First Play Brings Chaucer to Her Beloved Northwest London |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/11/theater/zadie-smith-wife-of-willesden.html |access-date=2023-03-14 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Wyver |first=Kate |date=2021-11-18 |title=The Wife of Willesden review – Zadie Smith's boozy lock-in is a bawdy treat |language=en-GB |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2021/nov/18/the-wife-of-willesden-review-zadie-smiths-boozy-lock-in-is-a-bawdy-treat |access-date=2023-03-14 |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> and at the [[American Repertory Theater]] in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 2023. ===Film and television=== * ''[[A Canterbury Tale]]'', a 1944 film, jointly written and directed by [[Michael Powell]] and [[Emeric Pressburger]], is loosely based on the narrative frame of Chaucer's tales. The movie opens with a group of medieval pilgrims journeying through the Kentish countryside as a narrator speaks the opening lines of the ''General Prologue''. The scene then makes a [[Match cut#Notable examples|now-famous transition]] to the time of World War II. From that point on, the film follows a group of strangers, each with their own story and in need of some kind of redemption, who are making their way to Canterbury together. The film's main story takes place in an imaginary town in Kent and ends with the main characters arriving at Canterbury Cathedral, bells pealing and Chaucer's words again resounding. ''A Canterbury Tale'' is recognised as one of the Powell-Pressburger team's most poetic and artful films. It was produced as wartime propaganda, using Chaucer's poetry, referring to the famous pilgrimage, and offering photography of Kent to remind the public of what made Britain worth fighting for. In one scene, a local historian lectures an audience of British soldiers about the pilgrims of Chaucer's time and the vibrant history of England.<ref>Ellis, Steve, ''Chaucer at Large'', Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2000, pp. 64–65. {{ISBN|0-8166-3376-2}}.</ref> * [[Pier Paolo Pasolini]]'s 1972 film ''[[The Canterbury Tales (film)|The Canterbury Tales]]'' features several of the tales, some of which cohere to the original tale and others which are embellished. "The Cook's Tale", for instance, which is incomplete in the original version, is expanded into a full story, and "The Friar's Tale" extends the scene in which the Summoner is dragged down to hell. The film includes these two tales as well as "The Miller's Tale", "The Summoner's Tale", "The Wife of Bath's Tale", and "The Merchant's Tale".<ref>Pencak, William, ''The Films of Derek Jarman'', Jefferson: McFarland & Co, 2002, pp. 178–9. {{ISBN|0-7864-1430-8}}.</ref> "The Tale of Sir Topas" was also filmed and dubbed; however, it was later removed by Pasolini, and is now considered [[lost film|lost]]. * [[Alan Plater]] retold the stories in a series of plays for BBC2 in 1975: ''[[Trinity Tales]]''. * On 26 April 1986, American radio personality [[Garrison Keillor]] opened "The News from Lake Wobegon" portion of the first live TV broadcast of his ''[[A Prairie Home Companion]]'' radio show with a reading of the original Middle English text of the General Prologue. He commented, "Although those words were written more than 600 years ago, they still describe spring." * [[Jonathan Myerson]] directed an animated version of ''The Canterbury Tales'' in three parts from 1998 to 2000. The series was nominated for an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] (as [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|animated short film]]) in 1999 and won the [[BAFTA]] Award for Best Animated Film<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0188478/awards "The Canterbury Tales" (1998) – Awards]</ref> in addition to four [[Primetime Emmy]]s.<ref>[http://www.timewarner.com/corp/newsroom/pr/0,20812,667371,00.html HBO Receives 23 Emmy Awards(r) in 51st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards(r) Competition, The Most of Any Network, and a Record For HBO]</ref> * The 2001 film ''[[A Knight's Tale]]'', starring [[Heath Ledger]], takes its title from Chaucer's "[[The Knight's Tale]]" and features Chaucer as a character. * In 2003, the BBC again featured modern re-tellings of selected tales in their six-episode series [[Canterbury Tales (TV series)|Canterbury Tales]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Canterbury Tales|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/canterburytales/|access-date=6 May 2007|publisher=BBC Drama}}</ref> ===Music=== * Recorded in 1965, [[Lester Trimble]]'s ''Four Fragments from the Caunterbury Tales'' sets to music four excerpts: "Prologe," "A Knyght," "A Yong Squier," and "The Wyf Of Biside Bathe." It is available in the [[Internet Archive]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Four Fragments from the Caunterbury Tales |first=Lester |last=Trimble |author-link=Lester Trimble |year=1965 |url=https://archive.org/details/lp_four-fragments-from-the-caunterbury-tal_lester-trimble-theodore-chanler}}</ref> * British [[Psychedelic rock]] band [[Procol Harum|Procol Harum's]] 1967 hit "[[A Whiter Shade of Pale]]" is often assumed to be referencing the Canterbury Tales through the line, "as the miller told his tale." However, lyricist [[Keith Reid]] has denied this, saying he had never read Chaucer when he wrote the line.<ref>{{cite web|author=Butler, Mike|title=In truth they were at sea: Lives of the Great Songs – A Whiter Shade of Pale: Vestal Virgins, light fandangoes: Procol Harum's classic can be baffling. Mike Butler asked its authors to help|date=17 September 1994|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music-in-truth-they-were-at-sea-lives-of-the-great-songs-a-whiter-shade-of-pale-vestal-virgins-light-fandangoes-procol-harum-s-classic-can-be-baffling-mike-butler-asked-its-authors-to-help-1449408.html|access-date=24 May 2021|work=The Independent}}</ref> * The title of [[Sting (musician)|Sting]]'s 1993 album ''[[Ten Summoner's Tales]]'' alludes to "[[The Summoner's Tale]]" and to Sting's birth name, Gordon Sumner.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Marienberg|first1=Evyatar|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_A0VEAAAQBAJ&dq=%22ten+summoner%27s+tales%22+canterbury&pg=PT101|title=Sting and Religion: The Catholic-Shaped Imagination of a Rock Icon|date=2021|publisher=Cascade Books|isbn=9781725272262|location=Eugene, Or.|access-date=2021-07-10}}</ref> {{Panorama |image=File:Canterbury-west-Winter-Highsmith.jpeg |fullwidth=6900 |fullheight=825 |height=165 |caption= [[Ezra Winter]], ''Canterbury Tales'' mural (1939), [[Library of Congress]] [[John Adams Building]], Washington, D.C. This mural is located on the west wall of the North Reading Room, and features the Miller, Host, Knight, Squire, Yeoman, Doctor, Chaucer, Man of Law, Clerk, Manciple, Sailor, Prioress, Nun, and three Priests; the other pilgrims appear on the east wall mural.<ref>{{cite web|title=On These Walls: Inscriptions and Quotations in the Buildings of the Library of Congress|website=[[Library of Congress]]|url=https://www.loc.gov/loc/walls/adams.html#norr|access-date=31 December 2012}}</ref>}} <gallery class="center"> File:The Knight - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Knight File:The Squire - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Squire File:The Reeve - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|Oswald The Reeve File:Canterbury Tales - The Miller - f. 34v detail - Robin with the Bagpype - early 1400s Chaucer.png|Robin The Miller File:Chaucer cook.jpg|Roger The Cook File:Wife-of-Bath-ms-2.jpg|Alison The Wife of Bath File:The Franklin - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Franklin File:The Shipman - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Shipman File:The Manciple - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Manciple File:The Merchant - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Merchant File:The Clerk of Oxford from the “Ellesmere Chaucer” (Huntington Library, San Marino).jpg|The Clerk of Oxford File:The Man of Law from the EllsMan of Law from the “Ellesmere Chaucer” (Huntington Library, San Marino).jpg|The Sergeant of Law File:The Physician - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Physician File:The Parson - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Parson File:The Monk - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Monk File:The Prioress - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|Madame Eglantine The Prioress File:The Second Nun - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Second Nun File:The Nun's Priest - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Nun's Priest File:Friar-canterbury-tales.jpg|Hubert The Friar File:The Summoner - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Summoner File:The Pardoner - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Pardoner File:The Canon's Yeoman - Ellesmere Chaucer.jpg|The Canon Yeoman File:Ellesmere Chaucer, mssEL 26 C 9, folio 153v, warmer image.jpg|Geoffrey Chaucer </gallery> ==References== {{Reflist|20em}} ==Bibliography== * {{Cite book| publisher = St. Martin's Press| isbn = 978-0-312-10667-6| last = Bisson| first = Lillian M.| title = Chaucer and the late medieval world| location = New York| date = 1998| url = https://archive.org/details/chaucerlatemedie00biss}} * {{Cite book| edition = 2| publisher = Oxford University Press| isbn = 978-0-19-871155-1| last = Cooper| first = Helen| title = The Canterbury tales| location = Oxford| series = Oxford guides to Chaucer| date = 1996}} * {{Cite book| publisher = G. Allen & Unwin| isbn = 978-0-04-800021-7| last = Pearsall| first = Derek Albert| title = The Canterbury tales| location = London| series = Unwin critical library| date = 1985| url-access = registration| url = https://archive.org/details/canterburytales0000unse}} * {{Cite book| publisher = Wall & Emerson| isbn = 978-1-895131-10-9| others = Alexis P. Rubin (ed.)| title = Scattered among the nations: documents affecting Jewish history, 49 to 1975| location = Toronto, ON| date = 1993| url = https://archive.org/details/scatteredamongna00alex}} ==Further reading== * {{Cite book| publisher = University of Michigan Press| isbn = 978-0-472-11161-9| last = Collette| first = Carolyn P.| title = Species, phantasms, and images: vision and medieval psychology in The Canterbury tales| location = Ann Arbor| date = 2001| doi = 10.3998/mpub.16499}} * {{Cite book| edition = 2| publisher = W.W. Norton| isbn = 978-0-393-92587-6| last1 = Kolve| first1 = V.A.| last2 = Olson| first2 = Glending| title = The Canterbury tales: fifteen tales and the general prologue: authoritative text, sources and backgrounds, criticism| location = New York| series = A Norton critical edition| date = 2005}} * {{cite journal|last1=Sobecki|first1=Sebastian|title=A Southwark Tale: Gower, the 1381 Poll Tax, and Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales|journal=Speculum|date=2017|volume=92|issue=3|pages=630–60|doi=10.1086/692620|s2cid=159994357|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/portal/files/44079043/692620.pdf}} * {{Cite book| publisher = Clarendon Press| isbn = 978-0-19-812378-1| last = Thompson| first = N.S.| title = Chaucer, Boccaccio, and the debate of love: a comparative study of the Decameron and the Canterbury tales| location = Oxford| date = 1996}} * {{Cite book| publisher = Spark Publishing | title = Spark Notes: The Canterbury Tales | location = New York | date = 2014}} * {{Cite book | publisher = Spark Publishing | title = No Fair: The Canterbury Tales | location = New York | date = 2009}} * {{Cite journal | journal= Journal of History Culture and Art Research|date=June 2013 |volume=2 |issue=2 |pages=49–56 | last = Dogan | first = Sandeur | title = The Three Estates Model: Represented and Satirised in Chaucer's General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales. |doi=10.7596/taksad.v2i2.229 |doi-broken-date=14 March 2025 |hdl=11511/51091 |hdl-access=free }} * Nicholls, Jonathan. "Review: Chaucer's Narrators by David Lawton", ''The Modern Language Review,''2017. * Pugh, Tison. "Gender, Vulgarity, and the Phantom Debates of Chaucer's Merchant's Tale", ''Studies in Philology'', Vol. 114 Issue 3, 473–96, 2017. ==External links== {{sister project links|The Canterbury Tales|wikt=Canterbury|commons=Category:Tales of Canterbury|q=Geoffrey Chaucer#The Canterbury Tales}} {{portal|Poetry|Books|Middle Ages|England}} '''General''' * [https://chaucer.fas.harvard.edu/pages/text-and-translations Texts and translations at Harvard University] * [https://www.canterburytalesproject.org/ The ''Canterbury Tales'' Project]: publishing transcripts, images, collations and analysis of all surviving 15th-century copies * [http://www.hs-augsburg.de/~harsch/anglica/Chronology/14thC/Chaucer/cha_ca00.html The ''Canterbury Tales'' at the Bibliotheca Augustana] * {{librivox book | title=The Canterbury Tales | author=Geoffrey CHAUCER}} '''Online texts''' * {{StandardEbooks|Standard Ebooks URL=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/geoffrey-chaucer/the-canterbury-tales}} * {{Gutenberg|no=2383|name=The Canterbury Tales and Other Poems}} * {{Cite book| publisher = Hodge & Braddock| isbn = 978-0-9636512-3-5| last1 = Ecker| first1 = Ronald L.| last2 = Crook| first2 = Eugene Joseph| title = The Canterbury Tales: A Complete Translation into Modern English | location = Palatka, FL| date = 1993| url = https://english3.fsu.edu/canterbury/}} '''Facsimiles''' * [https://www.library.wales/discover-learn/digital-exhibitions/manuscripts/the-middle-ages/the-hengwrt-chaucer The Hengwrt Manuscript]: the oldest manuscript copy * [http://openn.library.upenn.edu/Data/0028/html/ms_1084_002.html MS 1084/2 Canterbury tales at OPenn] * [http://hdl.huntington.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15150coll7/id/2838 Ellesmere Chaucer] * [https://bl.uk/manuscripts/FullDisplay.aspx?ref=Harley_MS_7334 British Library, Harley MS 7334] * [https://bl.uk/manuscripts/FullDisplay.aspx?ref=Harley_MS_1758 British Library, Harley MS 1758] * [https://bl.uk/treasures/caxton/ Caxton's Chaucer]: scans of William Caxton's two editions of Chaucer's ''Canterbury Tales'' {{Chaucer}} {{The Canterbury Tales}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Canterbury Tales, The}} [[Category:The Canterbury Tales| ]] [[Category:1400 books]] [[Category:14th-century poems]] [[Category:Short stories about adultery]] [[Category:Arthurian literature in Middle English]] [[Category:Canterbury]] [[Category:Censored books]] [[Category:Frame stories]] [[Category:Middle English poems]] [[Category:Narrative poems]] [[Category:Novels set in Kent]] [[Category:Unfinished poems]] [[Category:Unfinished novels]]
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