The Merchant's Tale Quotes Flashcards

1
Q

What is the description of the merchant?

A

His bootes clasped faire and fetisly
Ther wiste no wight that he was in dette
There is a duality to the character that is typical of Chaucer - he is conman and corrupt but also uses his intelligence to survive

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2
Q

What is the merchant’s opinion on his marriage?

A

Page 15
Weping and wailing
The worste that may be
She is a shrewe at al
Merchant expresses his misery in a loud melodramatic manner but the irony is that they have only been married for two months

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3
Q

What is Januarie’s early view of marriage?

A

Page 17
Describes wedlock as a paradise
Bodily delit
To take a wif it is a glorious thing
Talks about marriage as comfortable but this juxtaposes his obvious lustful motives

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4
Q

Early foreshadowing as marriage as a trap?

A

Page 19
Line 72 - a yoke can bind unwilling partners

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5
Q

Merchant speaks to the benefits of having a wife?

A

Page 21
Passen as a shadwe upon a wall
Wife will remain longer than you wish - all the positives are undermined

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6
Q

Examples of marriage from the Bible?

A

Page 25
Ironic biblical illusion of Rebekke engages and entertains the audience
Blurs paegan and Christian

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7
Q

What does Januarie want in a marriage?

A

Page 27
References to the old beef, tendre veel and flash
Lustful nature of his marriage - animalistic imagery conveys predatory intent

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8
Q

The wax truductio?

A

Page 29 line 218
Women can be manipulated by their husbands but foreshadows the actions of Damien

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9
Q

What is Placebo’s advice to Januarie?

A

Page 33
He sucks up to Januarie using superlative adjectives (278) and self degredation
Double negatives in 284 used for emphasis

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10
Q

What is Justinus’ opinion of marriage?

A

Page 35
Repeated didactic solemn preaching feels reductive and demeaning through the syndetic listing.
Mercantile imagery in line 326

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11
Q

How does Justinus describe his own marriage?

A

Page 37
Plosive alliteration in 335 and 336
341 wife is characterised as a shoe that gives him pain
The varied iambic pentameter of Januarie’s response conveys his anger

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12
Q

How does Januarie choose his wife?

A

Page 39
Line 370 with the mirror is an intertextual allusion to the Deschamp text The Mirror of Marriage - inspiration to the fabliau
Putting the mirror in the market place gives it a transactional implication
Last line acts as foreshadowing

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13
Q

What characteristics does Januarie want in a wife?

A

Page 41
Line 390 - hir middel smal, hire armes longe and sklendere
Asyndetic listing conveys the idealised female form from the courtly romance genre

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14
Q

What is Januarie’s main worry about being married?

A

Page 43
He has heard that men cannot experience perfect bliss twice, so he may not achieve heaven when he is dead.
429 truductio of tree - tree was seen as a reference to the seven deadly sins

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15
Q

When does Justinus describe marriage as purgatory?

A

Page 45
458 - she is a place of penance and suffering
Followed by a semantic field of weaponry

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16
Q

When are Januarie and May married?

A

Page 47
Line 481 - first time May is mentioned by name
485 - scrit and bond - portrays this marriage as a mercantile transaction.
494 - glosses over the religious aspect of the ceremony

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17
Q

The wedding feast?

A

Page 49 - presented as a pagan orgy
Presence of Venus emphasises this marriage is based on lust
515 fire imagery represents passion but also dangerous
526 reference to age

18
Q

How does Januarie feel at the wedding feast?

A

page 51
531 - enhances idea of fantasy wife
Verb choices like streyne and endure mix sexual desire with desire for physical violence

19
Q

How does Damien react at the wedding feast?

A

Page 53
‘ravisshed’ connotes sexuality suggesting he is not different from Januarie
571 - reference to Venus fire

20
Q

Januarie brings May to the wedding bed?

A

Page 55
Intertextual reference to De Coitu which gave advice on sexual intercourse. Merchant describes it as cursed due to his resentment towards marriage.
606 simile in the passive voice - as still as stone

21
Q

They have sex?

A

Page 57
He apologises for the potential violence of his embraces - ‘trespace’ , ‘greatly offend’
When he orgasms he sings - contrasts to May’s obvious discontent

22
Q

May’s reaction to the sex?

A

Page 59
May did not think much of Januarie’s love making
direct address from the narrator + high rhetoric foregrounds the narrator
Motif of Damien’s fire

23
Q

Januarie notices that Damien is missing?

A

Page 61
Continue to ironic epithets
Ironic positive description of Damien - ‘gentile’, ‘descreet’, ‘servisable’

24
Q

May and her women go to visit Damien?

A

Page 63
She hides the letter from Damien, which shows a defiant side of May who will not obey Januarie - intimate hiding place

25
Q

May flushes the letter down the toilet?

A

Page 65
Ludicrous parody of courtly love
Januarie forces May to take off her clothes - scene of marital rape
751 - the Merchant decides not to describe the sex - creating an inconsistency as he was previously very graphic

26
Q

May decides she will start an affair with Damien?

A

Page 67
766 - truductio
May is portrayed as gentile and kind for taking pity on Damien
Comedically hyperbolic - saying that it would be murder if she did not
Courtly love parody

27
Q

Damien is cured when May agrees?

A

Page 69
Sudden energy shown through the triplet of dynamic verbs 799
Subservient simile 802
817 - he builds a garden - allusion to Eden
820 - allusion to Romance of the Rose

28
Q

Januarie and his garden?

A

Page 71
836 - Mercantile way of describing sex
846 scorpion - symbolism of treachery + polyptoton of decieved
859 - he is made blind

29
Q

Januarie starts to get really jealous and won’t let May out of his sight?

A

Page 73
860 pleonasm in reminiscent of the Merchant
868 comparison to turtle dove shows he wants may to never remarry after his death
Hyperbolic tone creates humour

30
Q

Damyan makes a spare key to the garden?

A

Page 75
896 rhetorical question
905 truductio + wicket and clocket sexual innuendo

31
Q

May and Januarie enter the garden?

A

Page 77
Januarie uses the Song of Solomon to invite May into the garden
937 - the Merchant uses the word ‘lewd’ to describe this - could mean obscene, but also unlearned and ignorant
Song of Solomon is a series of erotic poems which have been interpreted about being about Christ and the Church but Januarie fails to understand this as he is too lustful

32
Q

Januarie confesses his love to May in the garden?

A

Page 79
‘as blind as is a stoon’ - unintelligent
Hyperbole - would rather die on a knife than offend her - ironic due to horrible sex
965 + 66 he is very jealous- ironic reference to truductio

33
Q

The first words May says?

A

Page 81
All ironic - ‘I am a gentil woman and no wench’
Her speech undermines religion as she prays to God that she will never be a bad wife
Sexual imagery when Damyan climbs up the tree

34
Q

Pluto talks about women’s deceit?

A

Page 83
Anachronistic as Gods quote the bible at the bottom of the page
Sexual violence - he ‘ravisshed’ Proserpina out of Edna
1027 - describes the deceit of women as treason

35
Q

Pluto and Proserpina continue their domestic argument?

A

Page 85
Misogyny on several levels (Merchant, Justinus, Pluto)
Pluto cites evidence from the bible - ironic description of Januarie in 1047 - ‘blinde, worthy knight’
Proserpina in 1063 - ‘lewd as gees’ - insult to men

36
Q

Proserpina rejects Pluto’s arguments?

A

Page 87
Women standing up to the authority of men
1064 - ‘What rekketh me of youre auctoritees?’
From 1080 - rampant use of rhetorical questions

37
Q

Pluto and Proserpina agree to disagree?

A

Page 89
First line - she undermines his king like authority by saying she doesn’t care what he thinks
1110 - comparison of Januarie to a parrot - the parrot is associated with a tame pet lover in Ovid
Final line - proxemics with Damyan

38
Q

May and Damyan have sex?

A

Page 91
1138 - 39 - Direct address from the Merchant - unreliable as he is usually euphemistic
1141 - ‘in he throng’ - grotesque sexual imagery
Deux ex machina - Januarie can see again

39
Q

Januarie sees May and Damyan have sex?

A

Page 93
1152 - childlike reaction - somewhat hyperbolic
Ambiguous whether May came up with the excuse by herself - could imply that women are more capable than men

40
Q

Januarie accepts May’s excuse?

A

Page 95
1194 - May suggests that she will continue to have sex with Damyan
Dramatic irony with the positive and intimate verbs ‘kisseth’ and ‘stroketh’

41
Q

The Host’s reaction to the tale?

A

Page 97
1216 - reference to shrew
1221 - vice connotes imprisonment
Reinforcement of misogamous and misogynistic view - overlooks the more complex aspects of blame