Study Questions for Chaucer's General
Prologue to the Canterbury Tales (first half)
Vocabulary:
frame narrative, ambiguity, bourgeoisie, satire,
stereotype, relic, unreliable narrator, guild, Great Vowel
Shift, Middle English, Epicureanism.
Introduction:
Why might we consider The Canterbury Tales as a
microcosm of the medieval world?
Lecture or Handouts: Who
is this Thomas á Becket fellow? Our story
begins in Southwark. What sort of place is Southwark? The
inn is called "The Tabard Inn." What is a tabard?
Why does the narrator-persona begin his discussion of the
various pilgrims by describing the knight first?
Identify the following characters:
the Friar (Hubert), The Nun or Prioress
(Madame Eglantine), the Knight, the Squire, the Yeoman,
the Monk, the Franklin, the Oxford Clerk, the Lawyer, the
Five Guildsman, the Cook, the Sailor
Reading Questions:
- What season is described in the opening passage of The
Canterbury Tales? What do people especially want
to do when this season comes, according to the narrator?
- Where especially do English people want to go? Why do
they want to go there?
- How many pilgrims does the narrator claim he meets at
the Tabard inn?
- THE KNIGHT
- What are some of the places where the Knight has fought?
- What does the Knight do to his opponents if he beats
them in the tournament ring ("the lists")?
- What is the Knight's conversation and speech like, according
to the narrator?
- What is the Knight's armor (his habergeon) like in appearance?
Why do you suppose it look like this?
- What pilgrim is the son of this Knight?
- THE SQUIRE
- How does the Squire's appearance contrast with that
of the Knight?
- How old is the Squire? What talents does he have and
how do they contrast with the Knight? Why does the Squire
sleep so little?
- THE YEOMAN
- What's a Yeoman in the medieval world? Why is the Yeoman
so sun-tanned? (What does this trait suggest about him,
his activities, and how he spends a time?) Why do you
suppose the Knight would want a servant who is good with
a bow?
- THE PRIORESS
- What's a prioress? What is the name of the particular
prioress who joins the pilgrimage company?
- What foreign language does the Prioress speak? Where
(according to her accent) did she learn to speak French?
What might this detail reveal about her background?
- How does the Prioress eat her food? What does this detail
suggest about her background?
- What is the Prioress's attitude toward animals? What
does this suggest about about her?
- What does her golden brooch have written on it? What
are two ways of interpreting this quotation?
- What four people accompany the prioress?
- THE MONK
- The Monk, we hear, is an "outrider." What
is an outrider in a monastery?
- What noise do people hear as the Monk rides past them?
- What is the Monk's attitude toward the Benedictine Rule
or the Mauritian Rule (i.e., the guidelines monks are
supposed to obey)?
- What does the Monk think of the argument that holy men
shouldn't hunt animals?
- What does the Monk think about studying books?
- What does the Monk think of Saint Augustine's Rule,
which requires that monastic clergy work with their hands
at manual labor?
- What animals follow the Monk around when he rides?
- What's unusual about the sleeves of the Monk's habit
(robe)? Why does this seem strange for a monastic habit?
- What sort of pin does the Monk wear in his habit? Why
is this pin strange or unusual for a Monk's clothing?
- THE FRIAR
- What is the Friar's name?
- What does the Friar frequently arrange for young women
in his parish? What are two ways of interpreting this
"generosity"?
- What sort of absolution does the Friar grant to sinners?
- What locations does the Friar know especially well in
every town? What sort of people does he know very well?
- We hear that the Friar was particularly of much help
on "love-days." What are two ways of interpreting
this phrase, "love-days"?
- THE MERCHANT
- What sort of hat does the Merchant wear?
- What sort of subject does the Merchant always talk about?
- What does the narrator say the Merchant's name is? (Trick
question!)
- THE OXFORD CLERK
- What does the word "Clerk" mean in medieval
times?
- What does the Clerk of Oxford look like in terms of
his physical build? What condition are his clothes in?
What does this suggest about the Clerk?
- What does the Clerk apparently spend all his money on?
- How talkative is the Clerk? When he talks, what traits
characterize his speech?
- What two things would the Clerk "gladly" do?
- THE LAWYER
- The lawyer (Sergeant-at-law) is capable of quoting what
verbatim? How busy is the lawyer?
- THE FRANKLIN
- The Franklin is described in particular detail. What
is his beard like? What color are his cheeks? (What modern
legendary figure does he resemble from our holiday season?)
- What does it mean when the text reads the Franklin "was
Epicurus' very son"? Who was Epicurus and what is
Epicurean philosophy?
- To what saint is the Franklin compared explicitly? Why
is this an appropriate comparison?
- What substances "snow" inside his house?
- THE GUILDSMEN
- The guildsmen--the Haberdasher, the Carpenter, the Weaver,
the Dyer, and the Arras (Tapestry) Maker--all have eating
utensils made of the same metal. What metal is this? [Lecture
question: Why are they carrying items of this metal?]
What hired help do the guildsmen bring with them?
- THE COOK
- Who does the Cook apparently work for in the pilgrimage
company?
- What does the Cook have on his shin? What does this
indicate about the Cook's health or hygiene?
- What normal color is the sweet blanc-mange
the Cook fixes? [Hint: the word "blanc"
provides a clue!] Why is this particularly gross, given
earlier details about the Cook's health?
- THE SAILOR
- What town is the sailor possibly from? [Lecture question:
What is the area around this town famous for in the medieval
period?]
- What does the Sailor keep on a cord around his neck?
What does he keep "under his arm?" What does
he keep hidden under his clothing {i.e., "and down")?
Why do you suppose he keeps three of these items? What
does it suggest about what sort of "sailor"
this man is?
- What does the Sailor steal while the traders on his
boat are asleep?
- If the Sailor gets involved in a naval battle, what
does he do with the people he captures, according to the
narrator? What does that mean?
- What is the name of his vessel?
- Click here for more
questions for the second half of the General Prologue.
Sample Quotations for Identification:
A. When April with his showers sweet with
fruit
The drought of March has pierced to the root
And bathed every vein with liquor that has the power
To generate therein and sire the flower;
When Zephyr also has with his sweet breath,
Quickened again, in every holt and heath,
The tender shoots and buds, and the young sun
Into the Ram one half his course has run . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Then do folk long to go on pilgrimage
And palmers to go seeking out strange strands,
To distant shrines well known in sundry lands.
B. And [he] bore himself as meekly as a maid.
He never yet had any vileness said,
In all his life, to whatsoever wight.
He was a truly perfect, gentle knight.
C. She was so charitable and piteous
That she would weep if she but saw a mouse
Caught in a trap, though it were dead or bled.
She had some little dogs, too, that she fed
On roasted flesh, or milk, and fine white bread.
D. [He was] A manly man, to be an abbot
able.
Full many a blooded horse had he in stable.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The rule of Maurus or Saint Benedict,
By reason it was old and somewhat strict,
This said monk let such old things slowly pace
And followed new-world manners in their place.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
I saw his sleeves were prufled at the hand
With fur of grey, the finest in the land.
E. For he would rather have at
his bed's head
Some twenty books, all bound in black and red,
Of Aristotle and his philosophy
Than rich robes, fiddle or gay psaltery.
Yet, and for all he was philosopher,
He had but little gold within his coffer.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Not one word spoke he more than was his need;
And that was said in fullest reverence
And short and quick and full of high good sense.
Pregnant of moral virtue was his speech:
And gladly would he learn and gladly teach.
F. Well could he tell a draught of London
ale.
And he could roast and seethe and broil and fry,
And make a thick good soup, and bake a pie,
But very ill it was, it seemed to me,
That on his shin a deadly sore had he;
For sweet blanc-mange, he made it with it with the best.
Click here for more passage
identifications for the second half of the General Prologue.