"Never again, never again the snare!
We married men, our life is grief and care.
Try it who will, and he will find, I promise
That I have spoken truly, by St. Thomas,
For most of us -- I do not say for all,
And God forbid that such a thing befall"
Middle English:
"I wolde nevere eft comen in the snare.
We wedded men lyven in sorwe and care.
Assaye whoso wole, and he shal fynde
That I seye sooth, by Seint Thomas of Ynde,
As for the moore part -- I sey nat alle.
God shilde that it sholde so bifalle!"
God shilde that it sholde so bifalle!"
The Host wittily reparts that since the Merchant is a marriage expert, he must certainly tell his tale. The Merchant agrees but cautions that he has said all he will of a personal nature.
The Merchant source Wikimedia Commons |
The Merchant's Tale
Battle of Pavia (after 1525) Unknown Flemish Artist source Wikimedia Commons |
"This opinion, and a hundred things worse,
Writes this man, may God his bones curse!
But take no heed of all
such foolishness;
Defy Theofrastus, and listen to me."
Middle English:
This sentence, and
an hundred thynges worse
Writeth this man,
ther God his bones corse!
But take no kep of
al swich vanytee;
Deffie Theofraste,
and herke me.
January & May ©Trustees of the British Museum |
January prefers Placebo's advice, which echoes his own and, thoroughly obsessed with his goal, begins his search for a wife.
"Exaggerated
imagination and constant thought
From day to day
became fixed in the soul
Of January concerning his marriage."
Of January concerning his marriage."
Middle English:
Heigh fantasye and
curious bisynesse
Fro day to day gan
in the soule impresse
Of Januarie aboute his mariage.
Of Januarie aboute his mariage.
January helping May into the tree Warwick Goble |
And so "tender youth has wedded stooping age" and all around them is mirth ..... and, of course, Chaucer's playful spirit. The wedding is described in detail, but January wishes it to end so he can slake his amorous desires on his new wife. Chaucer ensures that the descriptions of January are unflattering and lecherous, to place the reader into May's viewpoint, and as January spends hours satisfying his passion with her and assuring her that he can do no wrong in the eyes of the law, she finally takes to her room and locks herself in for four days.
Yet there is a serpent in Eden and his name is Damian, the knight's squire who is so enamoured of May "that for the very pain he was nearly crazy." January, believing that Damian is truly sick, visits him with May, whereupon Damian secretly give her a letter and she learns of his passion for her.
Meanwhile January decides to build a walled garden and he is the only one to possess the key. But soon after January loses his eyesight, and one day he suggests that he walk with his wife in this garden. Unbeknownst to him, May allows Damian to slip inside the garden, too. He climbs up into a pear tree to await their assignation. Meanwhile, the god Pluto and his queen Proserpine wander by and get into an argument, each giving examples of the treachery, deceit and sin of the opposite sex while supporting their own, thereby showing that the only true, good and perfect being is God.
Back to January and May, the latter who convinces her husband to let her climb on his back to get some pears in the pear tree. While up there, Damian has sex with her, but lo, Pluto returns January's sight and what meets his eyes causes him to explode in rage. Gentle May must reassure her husband that she is the cause of his regained sight and that since he has been blind for so long, what he sees at first is likely to be not at all accurate. She is able to restore January's faith and the story ends. I cannot but think that the two of them deserve each other.
What a fabulous tale and one that could be studied in great depth. Each line could be chewed over, and the allusions are numerous: from Esther to Solomon and from The Romance of the Rose to Venus, there are so many wonderful trails of stories from here that one could be kept busy for ages. January's physical blindness certainly echoes his intellectual blindness towards the matrimonial state. We may feel sympathy for January that he is unable to see his wife's plotting and tryst, yet even Chaucer mentions that Argus who had one hundred eyes was deceived, again implying that January's blindness is not merely a physical condition, but a condition of the heart. He willfully chooses blindness and the outcome would not have been different even if he had the use of his eyes. It reminded me of the play Oedipus Rex by Sophocles, another case of physical blindness paralleling a spiritual blindness. Bravo, Chaucer! This is my favourite tale so far!
Brilliant review Cleo as always. This is also one of the most used excerpt of The Canterbury Tale used in most schools for English Major....it is argued that this tale is perhaps the most complete tale of the entire book
ReplyDeleteThanks Cirtnecce, and thanks for the extra information which I didn't know. I could certainly see why they would pick this tale for study. It was very clever and covered a whole range of topics.
DeleteOedipus Rex - yes! I didn't think of it like that :)
ReplyDeleteI loved this one too - a great story. I love that picture by Warwick Goble, too - one of my favourites of his Chaucer pictures :)
Goble's work is so droopily lovely! Thanks for introducing me to him!
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