Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Chronology
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The General Prologue
- 3 Gentles: chivalry and the courtly world
- 4 Churls: commerce and the material world
- 5 Women
- 6 The art and problems of tale-telling
- 7 The final tales
- 8 Afterword: the reception of the Canterbury Tales
- Guide to further reading
- Index to discussions of indivisual tales
1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Chronology
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The General Prologue
- 3 Gentles: chivalry and the courtly world
- 4 Churls: commerce and the material world
- 5 Women
- 6 The art and problems of tale-telling
- 7 The final tales
- 8 Afterword: the reception of the Canterbury Tales
- Guide to further reading
- Index to discussions of indivisual tales
Summary
Chaucer and his poem
For most readers the Canterbury Tales mean the General Prologue, with its gallery of portraits, and a few of the more humorous tales. What we retain is a handful of remarkable personalities, and such memorable moments as the end of the Miller's tale. These are worth having in themselves, but it requires an extra effort to see the significant relationship among them, and to recognize that their bewildering variety is Chaucer's technique for representing a single social reality. We may compare the first part of Shakespeare's Henry IV, where our impressions can be so dominated by Falstaff, Hotspur and Hal as to leave Henry and the problems of his reign in shadow. The comparison is the more suggestive in that Shakespeare has recreated the England of Chaucer's last years, when a society that is essentially that of the Canterbury Tales was shaken by usurpation, regicide and civil war. Both poets describe a nation unsure of its identity, distrustful of traditional authority, and torn by ambition and materialism into separate spheres of interest. For both, the drives and interactions of individual personalities express a loss of central control, a failure of hierarchy which affects society at all levels.
Shakespeare's focus is always on a single “body politic,” and though his characters span all levels of society, their situations are determined by a central crisis of monarchical authority. Chaucer's project is harder to define.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales , pp. 1 - 17Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003