Geoffrey Chaucer I INTRODUCTION Geoffrey Chaucer Fourteenth-century English poet and public servant Geoffrey Chaucer wrote verse renowned for its humor, understanding of human character, and innovations in poetic vocabulary and meter.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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Tale of the Wife of BathThe Canterbury Tales by English poet Geoffrey Chaucer contains 22 verse tales and 2 prose tales presumably told bypilgrims to pass the time on their way to visit a shrine in Canterbury, England.
An excerpt from the tale of the Wife ofBath is heard here.
The wife relates that she has been married and widowed five times but the church has recognized onlyone marriage.
You can follow the Middle English text and modern translation as you listen to the audio excerpt.The Wife of Baths Prologue and Tale from The Canterbury Tales, by Geoffrey Chaucer, performed by Elizabeth Salter, from Geoffrey Chaucer: The Wife of Prologue and Tale(Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521635306) (p) 1976, 1998 Cambridge University Press.
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The Tales is a collection of stories set within a framing story of a pilgrimage to Canterbury Cathedral, the shrine of Saint Thomas à Becket.
The poet joins a band of pilgrims, vividly described in the General Prologue, who assemble at the Tabard Inn outside London for the journey to Canterbury.
Ranging in status from a Knight to ahumble Plowman, they are a microcosm of 14th-century English society.
The Host proposes a storytelling contest to pass the time; each of the 30 or so pilgrims (the exact number is unclear) is to tell four tales on the round trip.
Chaucercompleted less than a quarter of this plan.
The work contains 22 verse tales (two unfinished) and two long prose tales; a few are thought to be pieces written earlier byChaucer.
The Canterbury Tales, composed of more than 18,000 lines of poetry, is made up of separate blocks of one or more tales with links introducing and joining stories within a block.
Canterbury PilgrimsEnglish writer Geoffrey Chaucer devised the framework of a pilgrimage to Canterbury to create the 12 narratives ofdiffering literary styles that make up his masterpiece, The Canterbury Tales.
The Tales are a masterful combination ofsuch medieval genres as courtly love, allegory, and exemplary story, and are related in a dramatic and vivid manner,using both prose and verse forms.
This 15th-century illustration shows the pilgrims en route to Canterbury.Bridgeman Art Library, London/New York
The tales represent nearly every variety of medieval story at its best.
The special genius of Chaucer's work, however, lies in the dramatic interaction between the talesand the framing story.
After the Knight's courtly and philosophical romance about noble love, the Miller interrupts with a deliciously bawdy story of seduction aimed atthe Reeve (an officer or steward of a manor); the Reeve takes revenge with a tale about the seduction of a miller's wife and daughter.
Thus, the tales develop thepersonalities, quarrels, and diverse opinions of their tellers.
The prologues and tales of the Wife of Bath and the Pardoner are high points of Chaucer's art.
The Wife, anoutspoken champion of her gender against the traditional antifeminism of the church, initiates a series of tales about sex, marriage, and nobility (“gentilesse”).
ThePardoner gives a chilling demonstration of how his eloquence in the pulpit turns the hope of salvation into a vicious confidence game.
Although Chaucer in this waysatirizes the abuses of the church, he also includes a number of didactic and religious tales, concluding with the good Parson's sermon on penitence; this is followed by apersonal confession in which Chaucer “retracts” all his secular writings, including Troilus, and those Canterbury tales that “incline toward sin.” Like the ending of Troilus, the retraction is a reminder that Chaucer's genius was always subject to orthodox piety.
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