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The Pardoner In Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales

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During the fourteenth century Geoffrey Chaucer wrote the Canterbury Tales. The Canterbury Tales included several fictitious pilgrims, each having a prologue to describe them and a story to tell. The Pardoner, Chaucer's final pilgrim, acts and looks in a way deplorable to the rest of the travelers. The Pardoner is "man" most notable for his greed, physical abnormalities, and denial of the fictitious. His tale condemns his own nature, and shows the effects of alcohol on the human superego. Chaucer's description of the Pardoner is crucial to an understanding of his tale. The Pardoner's prologue although short, introduces the pardoner as a greedy man, who is willing to take advantage of others to get his fortune. His primary role as a pardoner is to …show more content…
According to David, the Wandering Jew could also be an analogy for the Pardoner's emotions, he states, "The compulsive wish for the tavern life sought by the three young men is complemented by the old man's death wish. Through the old man Chaucer reveals the Pardoner's real secret, the joylessness of the life he professes to relish so much." This hypothesis of David's highlights the fact that possibly the Pardoner's happiness with his own actions may just be a facade. This is a logical conclusion as the Pardoner already contradicted his own actions in his story by denouncing them. The Pardoner's tale provokes an understanding of a strong moral lesson, that it is foolhardy to chase death and live to tell a happy tale. It also tells of how camaraderie falls out when greed and alcohol are involved. The kicker of this moral learning tale is that the teller of the tale is the one most guilty of the sins present in the tale. In order easier to the tale the reader must understand that it's author embodies contradiction and the paradox, making this story expected of

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