Merchant's Tale And The Clerk's Tale example essay topic
(Bantam, 252) Indeed, the reader is given such diverse accounts of marriage, and it is the intricate task of the reader not only to integrate the meanings of tales, but to individually excavate the narrative voice to understand this meaning. Both the Clerk's Tale and The Merchant's Tale utilizes an ironic structure to mean quite differently than the narrative voice says. M.H. Abrams defines irony thus: Some literary works exhibit structural irony, in that they show sustained irony. In such works the author, instead of using an occasional verbal irony, introduces a structural feature which serves to sustain a duplicity of meaning. One common device of this sort is the invention of a na " ive hero, or else a na " ive narrator or spokesman, whose invincible simplicity or obtuseness leads him to persist in putting an interpretation on affairs which the knowing reader-who penetrates to, and shares, the implicit point of view of the authorial presence behind the na " ive persona-just as persistently is called on to alter and correct. (Abrams, 90) The structural irony within The Merchant's Tale is announced at the outset. By comparing the prologue with the opening of the tale, the reader can understand that the narrative voice of the Merchant signifies contrary to what is denotatively stated.
The Merchant opens the tale deriding the institution of marriage: We ping and way ling, care and other sor weI know yogh, on even and a-more", Quod the Marchant, "and so doon other o That wedded been. I tro we that it be so, For we I woot it far eth so with me. I have a wy f, the worse that may be; For though the fe end to hire y-coupled were, She wold e, I dar we's were. (Bantam, 240) Stating that his wife could take on the devil, the narrator goes on to open his tale lauding the institution of marriage.
Preying our Lord to him that he Might ones know of blissful lyfThat is an and his wy f, And for to live under that holy bond With which that first God man and woman bond". Non other ly f,' sede he, is worth a bene, For wedlock is so easy and so cleneThat in this world it is a parades". (Bantam, 242) The Merchant is telling this tale instead of telling the true story of why he is so miserable as a result of his marriage. Thus we can expect structural irony in this part because he must first set man up as positive towards marriage to emphasize the cruelty when he realizes he has been cuckolded.
But, what the Merchant is not aware of is that Chaucer is using this bias in conjunction with his own bias in order to criticize the male in the institution of marriage. Bernard Huppe notes that the Merchant. ".. probably does not perceive the real point of the tale he tells" (Huppe, 162). But the reader must ascertain that this story is again an indictment of man's self-justified and self-indulgent tendencies. January's plight is complicated by the allegorical significance that men consistently deceive themselves so as to remain content. Though the reader is aware throughout the tale that January is the motivator of his own cuckolding, the heart still wrenches with pity at his pathetic acceptance of his wife's explanation and deception: ... he ya a ro ring and a cry, As doth the modern what the child shal dye". Out!
Help! A llas! Harrow!" he gan to cry", O strong lady store, what do stow?" And she answered, "Sire, what yow? Have patience and res on in youre mind. I have on bo the your even blind. (Bantam, 292) She of course goes on to tell him that, though he saw them copulating, his eyes are faulty.
Indeed, the reader must note that Chaucer is commenting on the masculine qualities of self-deception and narcissism in the Merchant's Tale. Though, in the Merchant' Tale, one must cringe at the gullible self-deception that January allows himself to fall into, the author has also continually indicated that the fault of this adultery lies with him. Bernard F. Huppe concurs that our howls of execration are for the young girl May who is in marriage with old, self-indulgent January: "The Merchant's Tale in addition extends the theme of the marriage debate by placing the primary responsibility for the Wife's heresy where it belongs, on the husband" (Huppe, 162). The tale, ostensibly criticizing women thus uses structural irony to indicate that the fault lies with the man. In both the Merchant's Tale and the Clerk's Tale the men are motivated solely by their own concerns.
In both instances, it is this narcissism that signifies the corruption of the marriage, for the reader understands that Marquis Walter would have been much happier, and Griselde no less loyal, if he had not faked the murder of her children, and the annulment of their marriage. Also, January would not have been cuckolded had he not recklessly pursue his own pleasure without concern for another's. Note that January contends that I warne thee, if wisely thou wolf wir che, Love we they wy f as christ loved his; If thou love st thyself, though love st thy wy f. (Bantam, 248) However, Chaucer means quite the opposite: loving oneself has nothing to do with loving one's wife.
In fact, women are depicted as both the most noble and impotent of the pair in marriage. They must suffer as Griselde does in the Clerk's Tale, and have little choice in the matter. Chaucer obviously intends the Merchant's Tale and the Clerk's Tale to be told in conjunction. The Merchant states, Ther is a long and large differenceBetwix Grisildis grete pacienceAnd of my wy f the passing cruel tee. (Bantam 240) Though this ostensibly states that the tales will mean different things, it is a testament to Chaucer that he means something very similar; he just approaches from two different angles. The Clerk's Tale does not obviously utilize allegory, but instead relies on telling this tale of such incredulity in the style of straightforward realism.
Huppe elucidates: "The story outrages credibility, but not through its use of supernatural devices. The story is told realistically, and the motivations are psychologically, not allegorically based" (Huppe, 138). G.L. Kittredge notes further that the Clerk is aware of this and purposefully utilizing irony: He knew perfectly well that the real moral of his story was not that which his hearers would gather. He was aware that Griselda was no model for literal imitation by ordinary womankind. If so taken, his tale proved too much; it reduced his argument ad absurdum" (Kittredge, 16).
This tone, though, serves to render satirical irony, because the incredibility of what is said can thus be understood as pointing towards the masculine need for affirmation of power. This satirical irony is pervasive in this tale. Huppe notes that it was not a mistake on Chaucer's part to render this tale with such gravity: "Yet Chaucer has shown great respect or the Clerk, so that it is hard to understand his putting him at a disadvantage, and, of course, he has not. What he has done instead is to present the Clerk as a master ironist" (Huppe, 138). On the purely content level, there is fundamental irony in the fact that Marquis Walter makes his wife, and probably his marriage, miserable in his quest to affirm her loyalty.
Furthermore, he is duplicitous and manipulative to her, making him the betrayer. The tale begins with the Marquis Walter deciding to marry at the behest of his people. It is not his inclination, nor does he have a specific girl in mind. But he listens to his constituents, who state, For certes, lord, so well us like th you And all your work, and e'er have done, that we Ne couldn not ourselves devise n how We might live more in felicity, Save one thing, lord, if it your wille be, That for to be a wedded man you lest, Then were your people in sovereign he artes rest. (Saunders, 285) It is ironic that Marquis Walter is taking on a wife to appease his people, and for Griselde's sake we certainly wish he had not.
But marriage to this feudal lord becomes merely another area in which he must exercise total control and demand allegiance. We note that his proposal to Griselde reeks of contractual obligation, and foreshadows a marriage that is based on control: I say this, be ye ready with good heart To all my lust, and that I freely may, As me best liste, do you laugh or smart, And never ye to it, night nor day, And eke when I say Yeah, ye say not Nay, Neither by word nor frowning countenance? Swear this, and here I swear our alliance. (Saunders,'s 246) Of course, the narrative voice is inconsistent with the author's purpose. We can understand the structural irony in this tale to allow Chaucer to liken man's marital habits with that of a lord; the problem, as Chaucer sees it, is that man marries as a power relationship. The narrator notes, The Clerk, what he is old, and may night do Of Venus worth his old so, Than sit he don, and writ in his dotage That women can nat kept hir marriage.
(Saunders, 242) Certainly, we can realize that in the case of Griselde, this was not true. It was the Marquis Walter's constant testing that was the fundamental problem. I believe exploring this is the most apt route for apprehending meaning in the Clerk's Tale. This tale is a satirization depicting a continual increase in the horrors that Marquis Walter puts Griselde through. We must ask what the function of this is to the meaning of the tale. I contend that it is another assertion by Chaucer that a fundamental problems in marriage is the masculine need to continually affirm the loyalty of his partner.
It is, paradoxically, this trait that Chaucer would suggest is the cause for disloyalty. To read this tale as anything but a moral satire is to lose the purpose of this tale. This tale has been lambasted as exhibiting cruelty towards women, but in actuality the function of this is to criticize such cruelty. Were, for instance, Griselde to ultimately rebel, the tale would lose its ironic meaning. When the sergeant comes to take her baby, it is a painful reading process because of her meek: ...
Grisildis must all suffer, and all consent, And as a lamb she sit teth meek and still, And let this cruel sergeant do his will. (Saunders, 294) And furthermore, it seems to me that the irony is certainly obvious at the conclusion. Chaucer writes, Thus hath this piteous day a blissful end; For every man and woman doth his might, This day in mirth and revel to dispend; Till on the welkin shone the star res bright; For more solemn in every man nes sight This feast e was, and greater of cost age, Than was the revel of their marriage. (Saunders, 307) Certainly, this was no blissful end. In both The Merchant's Tale and the Clerk's Tale the reader is urged by Chaucer to empathize with the wife. The narrative voices, however, express quite differently, especially in the case of the Merchant.
The issue of marriage is raised many times, and to excavate Chaucer's meaning, the reader must situate these in relation to each other. The use of structural irony allows the author leeway to create meaning. Those that have attacked these tales as misogynist are guilty, then, of perfunctory criticism, for Chaucer proves that narrative is quite separate from meaning.
Bibliography
Abrams, M.H. A Glossary of Literary Terms. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971.
Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. Ed. A. Kent Hieatt and Constance Hieatt. Toronto: Bantam Books, 1400. Chaucer, Geoffrey. Canterbury Tales. Annotated by John Saunders. London: J.M. Dent & Co., 1400. Huppe, Bernard F. A Reading of the Canterbury Tales. Albany: State University of New York, 1963.
Kittredge, G.L. "Chaucer's discussion of Marriage". In Critical essays on Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. Ed. Malcolm Andrew. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1991.