Examine the psychological power of the tale of the three rioters as narrated by Chaucer's Pardoner

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Examine the psychological power of the tale of the three rioters as narrated by Chaucer's Pardoner

First of all, the Pardoner sets the scene of his tale. Once upon a time in Flanders there was a group of young people who gave themselves up to debauchery and to gambling. They frequented brothels and taverns, where they danced to music and played at dice at all hours of day and night and where their excessive eating and drinking in that devil's temple they worshipped the devil himself. All the time they swore great and wicked oaths on the different parts of Christ's body, as if they were themselves tearing Christ's body to pieces over and over again, and as if they thought the Jews had not torn him enough. They were amused by each other's sins. All the dancing girls, market-girls, singers, prostitutes, and sweet-sellers who came into that place were really working for the devil, to draw the revellers into lechery, which is part of gluttony. The pardoner now claims inaccurately that the Bible supports him in saying that sexual sin is linked with drunkenness.

The reader cannot reach The Pardoner's Tale itself without seeing it as intimately connected with the character and purposes of its teller. The opening scene of debauchery in the tavern links back to the theme of the Pardoner's own drinking. Indeed, he mentions having just had a drink of ale at the end of his prologue. It could be seen that the Pardoner is in fact telling his tale - with its preaching against drunkenness - inside the tavern where he has had his drink. There is no explicit reference in the poem to support this, and the last line of the tale ('Anon they kiste, and riden forth hir weye') could be taken to mean the pilgrims have been on horseback throughout the tale. Chaucer does tend to forget the setting of the tale telling in the Canterbury Tales, except when this is particularly significant. If a tavern setting were to be imagined for the Pardoner's performance, Chaucer would probably have mentioned it. In any case, the preaching against drunkenness is only part of the tale, not the whole. The Pardoner's stop at an inn before he tells his tale is probably enough to suggest his own involvement with the world of taverns. Even in his drunkenness, there is the hint of extravagant performance and boasting:
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'Nay, I wol drinke licour of the vine,

And have a joly wenche in every toun.'

His drinking is associated with his sexual boasting, and this at least we know must be an empty boast.

Within the Pardoner's tale itself, approximately the first third is taken up by the Pardoner's examples of his preaching against those sins of the tavern scene with which he opened. It is only after his preaching that he returns to his narrative of the search for Death. This is the example of that short and memorable tale which he has ...

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