The Canterbury Tales in bite-sized chunks. Part 6

@indexer (4852)
Leicester, England
July 31, 2019 9:38am CST
Here are the final five 100-word Canterbury Tales: Nun’s Priest’s Tale Chauntecleer the cockerel has a long debate with Pertelote, one of his hens, about the power of dreams and how they can be portents of disaster, with each of them quoting extensively from literature, history and mythology. Some weeks later Chauntecleer is caught by a fox and the farm people give chase. Chauntecleer tells the fox that he should face his pursuers and tell them to back off. When the fox opens his mouth to do so, Chauntecleer escapes and flies up into a tree. The fox tries to inveigle him back down but Chauntecleer refuses to be caught twice. Second Nun’s Tale In Roman times, Cecilia marries Valerian but tells him that her virginity is guarded by an angel. She advises him to consult Pope Urban, who baptizes him so that he can now see the angel. Valerian persuades his brother Tibertius to become a Christian. Almachius the Roman prefect arrests the brothers and condemns them to death, but Maximus the executioner says that he saw their souls ascend to Heaven and is himself converted but then executed. Cecilia survives being boiled alive and lives for three days after an attempt to behead her. She uses this time to make more converts. Canon’s Yeoman’s Tale There are two tales. In the first the yeoman reveals the secrets of his employer who has a sideline as an alchemist who cheats people out of their money when he persuades them that he can find the “philosopher’s stone” to cure all illnesses. In second tale a different canon/alchemist tells a priest that he can change quicksilver into real silver. This is done with trickery and sleight of hand that nevertheless convinces the priest that a real change has taken place. The priest pays a huge sum of money for the “recipe”, after which the canon makes himself scarce. Manciple’s Tale Phoebus the sun god once lived on Earth where he kept a white crow with a beautiful song and the ability to speak. He also had a young wife whom he loved and treated well but guarded closely. Once, when he was out, his wife entertained a lover. The crow saw everything and told Phoebus, who killed his wife by shooting her with an arrow. Phoebus immediately regretted this and blamed the crow for telling him lies. The crow’s punishment was to have his white feathers turned to black and to lose the power of speech and his singing voice. Parson’s Tale This is a long sermon based on a text from Jeremiah, supposedly preached by a reformist Lollard priest. It is a disquisition on the Seven Deadly Sins, for each of which there is a long list of actions that can be counted as committing the sin together with recommended remedies, such that, for example, gentleness and patience are the cure for anger. The terms of confession and penitence for each sin are laid out, but there is also a warning against making false confessions of sins that have not been committed. Given the length of the list, this sounds improbable!
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@innertalks (23741)
• Australia
5 Aug 19
Interesting tales. I have never spent much time with these classics of English Literature. I didn't like being "forced" to study them at school. Such literature, I guess, gains importance from the writer's ambitional thrusts towards his perceived readers. The writer also writes to say something from himself, about the times he lives in too.
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@indexer (4852)
• Leicester, England
5 Aug 19
I suppose it depends on how you were taught! My experience of Eng Lit - both at school and university - was not one of being forced but of being introduced to many wonderful worlds of language and ideas that I have loved to explore ever since. If you also have a love of history - as I have - then you will find that literature such as The Canterbury Tales makes the history come alive because it speaks from the time in question and in the voices of the people who lived then.
1 person likes this
@innertalks (23741)
• Australia
5 Aug 19
@indexer Yes, I like English literature, and history now, many years later, but back then, in my schooldays, I preferred maths, science, subjects, and didn't like having to do English, and reading novels, like Tolkien, or Lord of the Flies. I was forced at the time, to read the books, and to write discussion pieces about it, analysing characters, motives of the writer, etc etc. Fifty years can change one for the better. I like writing now, but I remember when my mum when to England many, many years ago, she wanted me to write to her. I just wrote one line which said. "--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------" "Just a line to say, I'm fine." I drew the line back then with a pencil, as no computers then.