Chaucer 3 (Literature)

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__________________________________________________________ The Miller and The Reeve: Tales of Two “Churls”

BY YEONG MIN KIM October 9, 2008 Following the completion of the noble, stately, and dignified Knight’s Tale, the inebriated Miller rudely interrupts the Host and attempts to “quite1” the Knight’s Tale with a churlish story that reveals risqué and bawdy content. As a result, the Miller’s impatient action triggers a system of storytelling that breaches social decorum and is progressed by the various participants acting and reacting against one another’s tales. Just as the Miller responded to the Knight’s Tale in his drunken state, the Reeve or “Osewald” (3860) follows suit by echoing the Miller’s action and emotionally reacting against the mocking overtone of the Miller’s Tale. The Reeve’s reaction to the Miller’s tale, however, is fueled by a desire to punish or “quite” the Miller by means of directing the tale against the Miller himself, which results in a tale that is ampler in vulgarity, violence, and moral corruption. The Reeve’s enragement- largely brought on by the Miller’s insult to his craftsman profession in the Miller’s story of the old, cuckolded carpenter- is clearly evidenced in the beginning of his prologue. The Reeve vows to “quite” (3864) the miller with a tale of the “bleryng of a proud milleres ye2” (3865), and declares to somewhat make a fool of him, as it is permissible to repel force with force (3911-3912). Finally, Osewald, towards the end of his prologue, states, “I shal hym quite anoon; Right in his cherles termes wol I speke” (3916-3917). With this, the Reeve reveals his determination to present the pilgrims with an equally, if not more, churlish tale that would counter the Millers Tale. In its style and setting, the Reeve's tale runs parallel to the Miller's, as both are classic examples of the “fabliaux.” The “fabliaux,” according to the Riverside Chaucer, is often a short, salacious tale 1 2

Quite: Requite; seek retaliation. bleryng of a proud milleres ye: deluding, tricking a proud miller.


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