The Canterbury Tales is a collection of stories, mostly in verse, written by Geoffrey Chaucer chiefly from 1387 to 1400. They are held together in a frame story of a pilgrimage on which each member of the group is to tell two tales on the way to Canterbury, and two on the way back. Fewer than a quarter of the projected tales were completed before Chaucer's death.[1] It is uncertain in what order Chaucer intended the tales to appear; moreover it is very possible that, as a work-in-progress, no final authorial order of tales ever existed.

Several different orders are evident in the manuscripts of the work; in addition certain orders and structures of the Tales have been proposed by scholars.

Key

The table below enumerates all the pilgrims mentioned in the General Prologue, plus two that materialise later in the tales, and the stories they tell. It also compares the orders in which stories appear in various sources.

Scholarly arrangements[2]

Manuscripts: Over 80 manuscripts containing all or part of The Canterbury Tales exist. The six tabulated below represent the four main orders (El, Cx, La, Pw) in which tales appear in the manuscripts, plus two significant anomalous arrangements (Hg, Ha).[7] All manuscript orders (except Hg*) were collated by Furnivall.[8]

Table

(+G = Manuscript includes the non-Chaucerian Tale of Gamelyn after the Cook's initial abortive attempt to tell a tale.)

Pilgrim GP Tyr CS El Hg Hg* Cx La Pw Ha
Knight 1 I.2 A.2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
Squire (Knight's son) 2 V.1 F.1 12 13 10 7 7 9 12
Yeoman (Knight's servant) 3
Prioress 4 VII.2 B2.2 17 21 18 19 19 7 19
Nun "Second Nun" (with Prioress) 5 VIII.1 G.1 22 16 13 14 14 16 14
Priest "Nun's Priest" (with Prioress) 6 VII.6 B2.6 21 10 22 23 23 23 23
Second Priest (with Prioress) 7
Third Priest (with Prioress) 8
Monk 9 VII.5 B2.5 20 9 21 22 22 22 22
Friar 10 III.2 D.2 8 7 7 10 9 12 8
Merchant 11 IV.2 E.2 11 14 11 8 12 10 11
Clerk 12 IV.1 E.1 10 17 14 12 11 14 10
Sergeant of Law "Man of Law" 13 II B1 6 12 9 6 6 8 6
Franklin 14 V.2 F.2 13 15 12 13 13 15 13
Haberdasher (guildsman) 15
Carpenter (guildsman) 16
Weaver (guildsman) 17
Dyer (guildsman) 18
Tapestry Weaver (guildsman) 19
Cook (with guildsmen) 20 I.5 A.5 5 5 5 5 5 +G 5 +G 5 +G
Shipman 21 VII.1 B2.1 16 20 17 18 18 6 18
Doctor of Physic "Physician" 22 VI.1 C.1 14 18 15 16 16 18 16
Wife of Bath 23 III.1 D.1 7 6 6 9 8 11 7
Parson 24 X.1 I.1 25 24 24 25 25 25 25
Plowman (brother of Parson) 25
Reeve 26 I.4 A.4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
Miller 27 I.3 A.3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Summoner 28 III.3 D.3 9 8 8 11 10 13 9
Pardoner (with Summoner) 29 VI.2 C.2 15 19 16 17 17 19 17
Manciple 30 IX H 24 11 23 24 24 24 24
"Chaucer" (General Prologue) 31 I.1 A.1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
"Chaucer" (Sir Thopas) 31 VII.3 B2.3 18 22 19 20 20 20 20
"Chaucer" (The Tale of Melibee) 31 VII.4 B2.4 19 23 20 21 21 21 21
"Chaucer" (Chaucer's Retraction) 31 X.2 I.2 26 - - 26 26 26 26
Our Host 32
Canon's Yeoman - VIII.2 G.2 23 - - 15 15 17 15
Canon -

Notes

  1. ^ According, that is, to the Host's initial proposal in The General Prologue (Fragment I.790–801). However, at another point only "a tale or two" is stipulated (Fragment V.698); finally in The Parson's Prologue only one tale per pilgrim is required (Fragment X.15–25) (Benson 1987, p 796). This may indicate a reduction in Chaucer's intended scope. At one tale per pilgrim (and assuming the work is complete upon arrival at Canterbury, with no return trip) then the work is roughly 70% complete.
  2. ^ Furnivall 1869, pp xxi.
  3. ^ Benson 1987, p 772.
  4. ^ Furnivall 1868, pp 9–11.
  5. ^ Furnivall 1868, pp 12–44.
  6. ^ Benson 1987, p 5.
  7. ^ Benson 1987, p 1120-21.
  8. ^ Furnivall 1869, pp xxi ff. Confirmed in Manly & Rickert 1940, pp 495–99.
  9. ^ Benson 1987, p 1119.
  10. ^ Manly & Rickert 1940, pp 478–479.
  11. ^ Manley & Rickert 1940, p 497.
  12. ^ Benson 1987, p 1118.

References