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FREE ESSAY ON CANTERBURY TALES - THE PRIORESS

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"Canterbury Tales"
An analysis of the prologue of Geoffrey Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales". -- 3,100 words; MLA

"The Canterbury Tales"
A discussion on Geoffrey Chaucer and the religious clergy in "The Canterbury Tales". -- 1,125 words;

"Canterbury Tales"
a comparison of two characters: Wife of Bath and the Prioress. -- 650 words;

"The Canterbury Tales" and the Medieval Church
This paper discusses Chaucer's bitter description of the medieval church as a thoroughly corrupt institution. -- 1,475 words;

Chaucer’s Monk and Prioress
An analysis of the monk and prioress characters in Chaucer's work "Canterbury Tales". -- 1,450 words; MLA

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CANTERBURY TALES - THE PRIORESS

The Canterbury Tales - The Prioress
Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, written in approximately 1385, is a collection of
twenty-four stories ostensibly told by various people who are going on a religious
pilgrimage to Canterbury Cathedral from London, England. Prior to the actual tales,
however, Chaucer offers the reader a glimpse of fourteenth century life by way of what he
refers to as a General Prologue. In this prologue, Chaucer introduces all of the
characters who are involved in this imaginary journey and who will tell the tales. Among
the characters included in this introductory section is a Nun, or a Prioress. 
Throughout Chaucer's tale, there are characters which he seems to admire greatly, such as
the knight and then there are characters that he makes fun of. The prioress, with her
false sense of airs and piousness is one of these. Throughout Chaucer's prologue and the
prioress' tale, we are shown what this so-called religious person is really about.
Chaucer's initial introduction to the Prioress is as follows:
There was also a nun, a prioress,
Who, in her smiling, modest was and coy;
Her greatest oath was but By Saint Eloy! 
And she was known as Madam Eglantine. 
Full well she sang the services divine, (118)
At first, one would think that Chaucer's description will be as flattering as that of the
knight but soon enough we see the total opposite because at first Chaucer describes her
as a delicate and well-mannered woman.
At table she had been well taught withal,
And never from her lips let morsels fall,
Nor dipped her fingers deep in sauce, but ate
With so much care the food upon her plate
That never driblet fell upon her breast.
In courtesy she had delight and zest. (127)
But soon Chaucer's description turns to one of sarcasm because the prioress is
pretentious and is trying very hard to look the part of refinement, when it is all
clearly superficial.
She was at pains to counterfeit the look
Of courtliness, and stately manners took,
And would be held worthy of reverence. (139)
This is especially bad, because nuns are not supposed to act this way. You can clearly
tell that although she was brought up in a well-to-do family, there is no connection
between how she acts and the religious dedication she is supposed to be showing. The
Prioress wore a coral trinket on her arm, had a rosary that was colored in green, and a
gold broach which said Amor Vincit Omnia (Love Conquers All), depicting a nun who still
had many valuable possessions. Also, the Prioress traveled with another nun and three
priests, showing she was respected.
Chaucer states that she speaks school-taught French instead of Paris style French. She
would like to appear sympathetic and tender and charitably solicitous.
That she would weep if she but saw a mouse,
Caught in a trap, though it were dead or bled. (144)
This appearance will soon change as soon as we hear the tale she tells. The tale she
tells is about the murder of a small child at the hands of Jews who loathe the child for
singing about the Virgin Mary.
In Asia, in a city rich and great
There was a Jewry set amidst the town,
Established by a rich lord of the state
For usury and gain of ill renown,
Hateful to Christ and those who are His own; (203)
The Prioress tells a tale set in an Asian town dominated by Jews. The Christian minority
in the town opened a school for their children in this city. Among these children was a
widow's son, a seven year old who was, even at his young age, was already deeply devoted
to his faith. At school he learned a song in Latin called the Alma Redemptoris. The song
was meant to praise the Virgin Mary. As he was walking home from school one day singing
this song, he provoked the anger of the Jews of the city, whose hearts were possessed by
Satan. They hired a murderer who slit the boys' throat and threw the body into a
cesspool. The widow searched for her missing child, begging the Jews to tell her where
her child might be found, but they refused to help. When she found him, although his
throat was slit, he began to sing the Alma Redemptoris. The other Christians of the city
rushed to the child and carried him to the abbey. The local provost cursed the Jews who
knew of this murder and ordered their death by hanging. Before the child was buried, he
began to speak. The Virgin Mary had placed a pearl on his tongue that allowed him to
speak, despite his fatal wound, but when the pearl was removed he would finally pass on
to heaven. The story ends with a lament for the young child and a curse on the Jews who
perpetrated this crime. 
The Prioress' Tale shows an overtly religious person centered around Christian principles
and a devotion to the Virgin Mary, but within the affection that the Prioress shows for
her Christian faith is a disquieting anti-Semitism that will be immediately obvious
anybody who reads the tale. The Prioress' Tale is full of shallow sentimentalism and
vicious bigotry. The child is angelic, at seven years old more devoted to Christian
teachings than any of the clergymen throughout the Canterbury Tales. The final moments of
the tale in which the Virgin Mary sustains him after his throat is slit are a shameless
exploitation meant to engineer false tears. The Prioress extends warmth and sympathy only
to the mother and her child, while heaping unabashed vitriol upon the Jews of the city,
who are portrayed as nothing less than allies of Satan. The details of the murder are
gruesome: the child is murdered for singing the praises of the Virgin Mary and dumped in
a pool of excrement. The logical conclusion of this tale is the Prioress' curse on the
Jews for their actions. 
The Prioress is a grotesque comic character and the tale conforms to the portrait that
Chaucer offers in the General Prologue. Chaucer describes the Prioress as a foolishly
sentimental woman who would weep over the death of a small mouse. She can extend her
sympathy to small children and other easy targets, but cannot find room for true mercy or
compassion. Although it would be a mistake to consider the tale as an overt attack on
anti-Semitism, for it would project modern liberal sensibilities into Chaucer's work, the
tale certainly condemns the Prioress for her cheap emotional responsiveness.

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