Saturday, June 1, 2019
Pardoners Tale, Chaucer, Canterbury Essay -- essays research papers f
The Pardoners Subconscious Character     "The Pardoners Tale," by Geoffrey Chaucer, makes evident the parallel between the inseparable emotions of people and the subconscious exposure of those emotions. This particular story, from The Canterbury Tales, is a revealing tale being told by a medieval pardoner to his companions on a voyage to Canterbury. Though the Pardoners profession is to pardon and absolve the sins of people, he actually lives in constant violation of sins such as gluttony, gambling, and, most importantly, avarice. The Pardoner does feel fault and advocates not to commit avarice he exclaims, "Radix malorum est Cupiditas," (line 426) as his theme more than once. Because he drinks so heavily before the poem, he is not aware that he is personifying himself in his tale. Furthermore, he inadvertently places a character in the story that is parallel to himself and who reveals his own personal desire the old man.    &nb spThe Pardoners sinful aliveness-style and imbibing habits are the cause for the old man to be placed in the story. His whole life, even his profession, is filled with terrible sin every day. The Pardoner knows himself that he is just in it for the money "Thus kan I preche agayn that same vice / Which that I use, and that is avarice." (Lines 427-28). Even though he is such a hypocrite, his daily greed and lifestyle does make him feel guilty. He continues on about how good of a preacher he is and how he can get money from even the poorest of people. As time passes and he continues on, the effect of the drink can be seen to take place with the subject of his speech. "his tongue loosened by drink, the Pardoner is conceivable as sufficiently carried away to boast incautiously as well as impudently." (Whittock, 187). When his tale starts to unfold, the parallel begins to take place.     At the point where the old man encounters the threesome men, t he Pardoner is personified. The first reaction to the old man is of his physical appearance. The old man is extremely old looking and decrepit. "Why lyvestow so longe in so greet age?" (Line 719). This may nourish been a reaction the Pardoner himself has encountered in reality. Because he cannot grow facial hair and become a man, others wipe out poked fun at him (as the host a... ...oner in turn destroys fiction in order to complete the process of rendering everything subjective and meaningless." (Williams, 73). His grim hopelessness towards life is not present because with life comes age, which he does not possess. He can never share in pleasures everyone else around him may feel, so he has to have different pleasures in life such as gluttony, avarice, deception, and jealousy. Therefore, all he is left with is a life that will be forever still and lonely. On the other hand, his drinking is what lets us see into what he actually wants. His parallel with the old man is his only way of letting the reader know of his authorized feelings.Works CitedWilliams, David. "Language Redeemed." The Canterbury Tales A Literary Pilgrimage.New York Twayne, 1987, 73-88.Gerould, G. H. "The Vicious Pardoner." Critics on Chaucer. Edited by Sheila Sullivan.     Gables Miami UP, 1970, 129-32.Hussey, S. S. "Chaucer An Introduction." New York Methuen & Co., 1981, 177-83.Whittock, Tevor. "The Pardoners Prologue and Tale."A Reading of the Canterbury Tales. London Cambridge UP, 1968, 185-94.
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