The Pardoner’s
Introduction, Prologue, and Tale
Fragment 6, lines
287–968
Summary: Introduction
to the Pardoner’s Tale
The Host reacts to the Physician’s Tale, which
has just been told. He is shocked at the death of the young Roman girl in the
tale, and mourns the fact that her beauty ultimately caused the chain of events
that led her father to kill her. Wanting to cheer up, the Host asks the
Pardoner to tell the group a merrier, farcical tale. The Pardoner agrees, but
will continue only after he has food and drink in his stomach. Other pilgrims
interject that they would prefer to hear a moral story, and the Pardoner again
agrees.
Summary: Prologue to
the Pardoner’s Tale
My theme is alwey oon,
and evere was—
Radix malorum est Cupiditas.
Radix malorum est Cupiditas.
After getting a drink, the Pardoner begins his
Prologue. He tells the company about his occupation—a combination of itinerant
preaching and selling promises of salvation. His sermon topic always remains
the same: Radix malorum est Cupiditas, or “greed is the root
of all evil.” He gives a similar sermon to every congregation and then breaks
out his bag of “relics”—which, he readily admits to the listening pilgrims, are
fake. He will take a sheep’s bone and claim it has miraculous healing powers
for all kinds of ailments. The parishioners always believe him and make their
offerings to the relics, which the Pardoner quickly pockets.
The Pardoner admits that he preaches solely to
get money, not to correct sin. He argues that many sermons are the product of
evil intentions. By preaching, the Pardoner can get back at anyone who has
offended him or his brethren. In his sermon, he always preaches about
covetousness, the very vice that he himself is gripped by. His one and only
interest is to fill his ever-deepening pockets. He would rather take the last
penny from a widow and her starving family than give up his money, and the good
cheeses, breads, and wines that such income brings him. Speaking of alcohol, he
notes, he has now finished his drink of “corny ale” and is ready to begin his
tale.
Summary: The
Pardoner’s Tale
The Pardoner describes a group of young
Flemish people who spend their time drinking and reveling, indulging in all
forms of excess. After commenting on their lifestyle of debauchery, the
Pardoner enters into a tirade against the vices that they practice. First and
foremost is gluttony, which he identifies as the sin that first caused the fall
of mankind in Eden. Next, he attacks drunkenness, which makes a man seem mad
and witless. Next is gambling, the temptation that ruins men of power and
wealth. Finally, he denounces swearing. He argues that it so offends God that
he forbade swearing in the Second Commandment—placing it higher up on the list
than homicide. After almost two hundred lines of sermonizing, the Pardoner finally
returns to his story of the lecherous Flemish youngsters.
As three of these rioters sit drinking, they
hear a funeral knell. One of the revelers’ servants tells the group that an old
friend of theirs was slain that very night by a mysterious figure named Death.
The rioters are outraged and, in their drunkenness, decide to find and kill
Death to avenge their friend. Traveling down the road, they meet an old man who
appears sorrowful. He says his sorrow stems from old age—he has been waiting
for Death to come and take him for some time, and he has wandered all over the
world. The youths, hearing the name of Death, demand to know where they can
find him. The old man directs them into a grove, where he says he just left
Death under an oak tree. The rioters rush to the tree, underneath which they
find not Death but eight bushels of gold coins with no owner in sight.
At first, they are speechless, but, then, the
slyest of the three reminds them that if they carry the gold into town in
daylight, they will be taken for thieves. They must transport the gold under
cover of night, and so someone must run into town to fetch bread and wine in
the meantime. They draw lots, and the youngest of the three loses and runs off
toward town. As soon as he is gone, the sly plotter turns to his friend and
divulges his plan: when their friend returns from town, they will kill him and
therefore receive greater shares of the wealth. The second rioter agrees, and
they prepare their trap. Back in town, the youngest vagrant is having similar
thoughts. He could easily be the richest man in town, he realizes, if he could
have all the gold to himself. He goes to the apothecary and buys the strongest
poison available, then puts the poison into two bottles of wine, leaving a
third bottle pure for himself. He returns to the tree, but the other two
rioters leap out and kill him.
They sit down to drink their friend’s wine and celebrate, but
each happens to pick up a poisoned bottle. Within minutes, they lie dead next
to their friend. Thus, concludes the Pardoner, all must beware the sin of
avarice, which can only bring treachery and death. He realizes that he has
forgotten something: he has relics and pardons in his bag. According to his
custom, he tells the pilgrims the value of his relics and asks for
contributions—even though he has just told them the relics are fake. He offers
the Host the first chance to come forth and kiss the relics, since the Host is
clearly the most enveloped in sin (942). The Host is outraged and proposes to
make a relic out of the Pardoner’s genitals, but the Knight calms everybody
down. The Host and Pardoner kiss and make up, and all have a good laugh as they
continue on their way.
Analysis
We know from the General Prologue that the Pardoner is as
corrupt as others in his profession, but his frankness about his own hypocrisy
is nevertheless shocking. He bluntly accuses himself of fraud, avarice, and
gluttony—the very things he preaches against. And yet, rather than expressing
any sort of remorse with his confession, he takes a perverse pride in the depth
of his corruption. The Pardoner’s earnestness in portraying himself as totally
amoral seems almost too extreme to be accurate. His boasts about his corruption
may represent his attempt to cover up his doubts or anxieties about the life of
crime (in the name of religion) that he has adopted. It is possible to argue
that the Pardoner sacrifices his own spiritual good to cure the sins of others.
Yet he doesn’t seem to really consider his spiritual corruption a real sacrifice,
since he loves the money and the comforts it brings him. Either way, he quickly
covers up his statement, which shows at least a flicker of interest in the good
of other people, with a renewed proclamation of his own selfishness: “But that
is nat my principal entente; / I preche nothyng but for coveitise” (432–433).
The Pardoner’s Tale is an example, a type of story often used by
preachers to emphasize a moral point to their audience. The Pardoner has told
us in his Prologue that his main theme—“Greed is the root of all evil”—never
changes. We can assume that the Pardoner is well practiced in the art of
telling this specific tale, and he even inserts some of his sermon into it. The
Pardoner’s point is quite obvious—his tale shows the disastrous effects of greed.
The hypocrisy he has described in his Prologue becomes evident in his tale, as
all the vices he lists in his diatribe at the beginning—gluttony, drunkenness,
gambling, and swearing—are faults that he himself has either displayed to the
other pilgrims or proudly claimed to possess. Ridiculously, when he has
finished his condemnation of swearing, he begins the tale swearing his own
oath: “Now, for the love of Crist, that for us dyde . . . now
wol I telle forth my tale” (658–660). Such an overtly hypocritical act is
perfectly consistent with the character that the Pardoner has presented to us,
and an example of Chaucer’s typically wry comedy.
As if on automatic pilot, the Pardoner completes his tale just
as he would when preaching in the villages, by displaying his false relics and
asking for contributions. His act is intriguing, for he makes no acknowledgment
of his hypocrisy. Only a few lines before, in his Prologue, he exposed to the
entire company the fraudulence of his whole operation. It is inconceivable that
he would now expect to get contributions from his fellow travelers—so why does
he ask for them? Perhaps, like a professional actor, the Pardoner enjoys the
challenge of telling his tale so convincingly that he tricks his audience into
belief, even after he has explained to them his corrupt
nature. Or perhaps he takes delight in showing the audience how his routine
works, as an actor might enjoy showing people backstage. In any case, the
Pardoner’s attempt to sell pardons to the pilgrims is a source of rancor for
the Host, because, in trying to swindle the other pilgrims, the Pardoner has
violated the Host’s notion of fellowship on which the storytelling pilgrimage
is based.
REFERENCE
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CHAUCER,
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1987.
COOPER,
HELEN. The Structure of THE
CANTERBURY TALES. London: Duckworth Press, 1983.
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DONALD. The Idea
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CANTERBURY TALES. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976.
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PEGGY A. Chaucer and the Social Contest. New York:
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DEREK. The Canterbury Tales. London: G. Allen & Unwin, 1985, reprint
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