How Does Chaucer Use Satire In The Canterbury Tales

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During the medieval times corruption in the Catholic Church were prevalent. As corruption became more prevalent during Chaucer’s time, the Pardoner’s practice of selling indulgences was becoming one of deception and greed, similar to the upper class focusing on becoming the richest and most powerful. In Geoffrey Chaucer’s, The Canterbury Tales, Chaucer would use satire to criticize different social classes. For example, Chaucer satirizes religious hypocrisy by representing it as the Pardoner while he unveils the corruption of the Pardoner’s job through a middle class man. The people who work for their possessions. Through his description of the Pardoner being a man who is disitful, greedy, and hypocritical, Chaucer uses satire to comment on …show more content…

Through his writing it can be claimed that he, himself, was following some sort of hierarchy. Leading up to a kind of foreshadowing of the “most” corruption in the Catholic Church. Later this is seen through the Pardoner’s prologue, him boasting to the rest of the pilgrimage of his own depravity and ingenuity for which he abuses his office to extract money from the poor and ignorant. This is proof of the corruption and hypocrisy that was part of the middle class. The Pardoner tries to justify his behavior through the way he interprets his faith and the Scripture. “But first I make pronouncement whence I come,/ Show them my bulls in detail and in sum/ And flaunt the papal seal for their inspection/… Or hinder me in Christ’s most holy work”(Chaucer 45-52). Ironically, a pilgrimage is a journey or search of morality or spiritual significance. As the Pardoner boats his con on the pilgrimage, it is quite clear that he thinks his work is “...Christ’s most holy work”(Chaucer 52). With that said, it completely rebutts what Christ’s work really is about. To add on to the corruption, earlier in the “General Prologue” the narrator mentioned how the Pardoner was adding to his irrelevent preaching of having relics. Such as …show more content…

The narrator of The Canterbury Tales gives the readers a fair description of the Pardoner; comparing his hair to a rat’s tail, his “bulging” eyeballs to a hare, his voice to a goat, and finally the narrator judged him to be a gelding, or a mare. It can be assumed that this Pardoner was not very high in the narrator’s liking. After taking hits at the Pardoner’s appearance, the author goes on to mentioning the Pardoner’s integrity through his tale. It is mentioned in his story that greed is the root of all evil. The motto the Pardoner swears by “Radix malorum est cupiditas,” is ironic as the similarity of the gambler in the tale and the Pardoner is slight but there. “To eat and drink far more than they can hold/ Doing thereby the devil sacrifice/ Within that devil’s temple of cursed vice”(Chaucer 180-181). To be able to complete these acts of eating one needs to be rich. In the medieval times the fatter you were the more people knew you were wealthy, yet, it was a sin to act in gluttony. The pardoner knew this since he mentions two other “ruins” of men, gambling and drinking. Many medieval theologians blamed gluttony for the Fall of man in Eden, since the story of Adam and Eve's is about their hunger for the fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil that made them disobey God's command. It is said by the

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