Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- The General Prologue
- The Knight’s Tale
- The Miller’s Tale
- The Man of Law’s Prologue and Tale
- The Wife of Bath’s Prologue
- The Wife of Bath’s Tale
- The Summoner’s Prologue and Tale
- The Merchant’s Tale
- The Physician’s Tale
- The Shipman’s Tale
- The Prioress’s Prologue and Tale
- Sir Thopas
- The Canon’s Yeoman’s Tale
- The Manciple’s Tale
- Chaucer’s Retraction
- Contributors and Editors
- General Index
- Index of Manuscripts
- Corrigenda to Volume I
The General Prologue
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- The General Prologue
- The Knight’s Tale
- The Miller’s Tale
- The Man of Law’s Prologue and Tale
- The Wife of Bath’s Prologue
- The Wife of Bath’s Tale
- The Summoner’s Prologue and Tale
- The Merchant’s Tale
- The Physician’s Tale
- The Shipman’s Tale
- The Prioress’s Prologue and Tale
- Sir Thopas
- The Canon’s Yeoman’s Tale
- The Manciple’s Tale
- Chaucer’s Retraction
- Contributors and Editors
- General Index
- Index of Manuscripts
- Corrigenda to Volume I
Summary
Chaucer was familiar with many of the framed story-collections circulating in the medieval west and he absorbed and occasionally followed their innovations, but Boccaccio’s Decameron was the only one to exert a decisive influence upon him in the composition of The Canterbury Tales. How thoroughly he knew it, when and where he became acquainted with it, and in what form are still matters of conjecture. Nevertheless, his debt to the Decameron for the overarching structure and plan of the Tales as well as for crucial aspects of narrative technique and content is well established and represents the broad consensus of modern scholarship. The parallels between the General Prologue and Boccaccio’s Introduzione are also striking. Both groups of people meet by chance, agree to go off together the following morning and to divert one another with stories under the direction of a master of ceremonies. Both authors, moreover, defend their literary autonomy by the use of similar authenticating devices (Chaucer in the General Prologue, Boccaccio in his Conclusione Dell’Autore) and see their tales as offering both profit and pleasure.
These similarities, however, are of a general nature. For a precise source of the General Prologue, Helen Cooper proposes the A-text of Piers Plowman as having the “strongest claim to being his direct model”:
[It] opens with a prologue that contains a spring setting followed by an estates satire, of the people working (or not) in the ‘field of folk’ that is an epitome of late fourteenth-century England. They include ideal ploughmen, merchants who appear to be thriving, priests who run off to London chantries to sing for silver, friars who dress in fine copes and give absolution in return for cash, a venal pardoner, rich sergeants-at-law, and a group of assorted burgesses, mostly clothworkers, ending, as does Chaucer’s list of guildsmen, with cooks. The Prologue and the other Sections of the A-text provide analogues to some sixteen of Chaucer’s pilgrims, including such unusual inhabitants of estates satire as cooks and pardoners, and there is a generous coincidence of detail.
Professor Cooper’s argument for the influence of Piers Plowman – and in particular the A-text of the poem – is strong and persuasive.
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- Sources and Analogues of the Canterbury Tales , pp. 1 - 86Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2003